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                  <text>Monday, February 23,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Area deaths

Cecile McClanahan

OVER THE EDGE- Elgbt people were Injured as
a bus traveling from Kerbollkson, N. Y. to Wildwood,
N.J. went partway off a cliff at a hairpin torn along !be

Mlnnewaska TraU (N.Y. route 44-55) Sunday. The bus
was filled with N. J. poli~e officers and their famllles.
. (AP Laserpboto) .

Weekend traffic deaths totall4

.

Velma E. Keller
Velma E. Keller, 75, Route I . Middleport, died Saturday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Keller was born May 26, 1905
in Meigs County, a daughter of the
late John and Effie Searles Wilt. She

Linley Roush
Linley Roush Jr., 54, Depot ~reet,
Rutland, Ohio, died Sunday at his
home.
Born April 5, 192Jl, in Hartford, he
was the son of the late Linley and
Mary Janette James Roush .
He was employed at the Rutland
Fuel Company, was a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ, Rutland , and
D.A.V. Meigs Chapter 53.
Surviving are his wife, Martha
Ann Hobbs Roush; two daughters,
Darlene Roush, Rutland, and Correna Farmer, Cheshire; two sisters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Chriner, Cincinnati;
and Mrs. Emma Sams, Albany,
Ohio; five brothers, Robert of Norwalk, Ohio ; Pearl of East Liverpool,
Ohio; Virgil of El Paso, Texas; Ernie of Letart, and James of
Marysvllle, Ohio; one granddaughter and two great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be condueled Tuesday, 1:30 p.m., at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. Errunett Rawson officiating.
Burial will follow in the Graham
Cemetery.

•

at y

e

AS!( TOWED
Marriage liceMeS were iuued to
Danny Lane Hobbs, 18, Albany, and

voi.29,No.ll8
copvriphted 1981

Sara Lenay Gaus, 18, Rt. 1, Rutland;
Charles Daniel Ohllnger 29, Letart,
W. Va. , and Connie E~ Warner,
2G, Pomeroy.
·

Disney movie, "Pete's Dragon"
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
Auditorium. AdmiBslon is
and
refreslunenll will be sold.

MADRID, Spam (AP) - More bright winter sunshine, they shouted
than 300 deputies and ministers held to crowd of several thousand, "Long
hostage in the Spanish Parliament Live Freedom!" "Long Live
left the building today after most of . Democracy!"
As caretaker Premier Adolfo
their 200 right-wing Civil Guard captors deserted, many jumping from Suarez left the building he was emwindows with the subrnachine guns braced by members of his family
they fired at the beginning of the and the crowd.
takeover.
Tejera Molina and a hard core of
The Civil Guard officer who led his guardsmen remained brieny inthe attempt to resurrect the Franco side the building, then gave up. One
dictatorship, Lt. Col. Antonio Tejera of the freed hostages quoted Tejero
Molina , surrendered Inside the Molina as telling the captives just
Parliament building, then was before the ordeal ended: "You can
whisked away in a black official car leave quietly. Nothing will happen
with a motorcyle escort.
here. The only thing that will happe
The ministers and deputies is that I will have to pay with 30 or 40
emerged one by one from their all- years in prison."
night ordeal in the Parliament
Authorities said Tejern Molina ,
building. As they stepped irto the

.1

r;;::==========::
LET UNQ.£ ROY,

lHE
PAT-A-

MAN,
BAJ(£ HIS BEST
I'AII£

"""

GOODIES fOR
YOIJ
•
POMEROY PASTRY

Fears of a possible flood from the
rising Ohio River lessened today as
cresting waters are apparently
receding, according to a spokesman
at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam .
The locks reported a 42.7-foot
reading on the lower gauge, with the
river stationary s ince 6 a.m.
A reading of 21 .I feet was recorded
today on the upper gauge. Normal
pool stage on both gauges is 12 feet
(formerly 18), the spokesman said.
Although dam officials had no
crest predictions, they said the rise

You'll hate to get c:i'essed
Introducing

Beautiful··
Ones

. MADRID, SPAIN- JUMPING OUT- A member of the Civil Guar·
ds who seized the Parliament lost nlght, pictured as he jumps from a window of the Parliament building when the rebellious action started. to come
to an end, Tuesday. He Is received outside by members of the National
Pollee which remained loyal to the King. Some of the Civil Guards left the
building through the window before the actual surrender. (AP
Wirephoto) .

ToDAY
'

o:

••.•IN· THE ·W

Prime lef!.ding rate decreases
NEW YORK - 11le prime lending rate has dropped as low as 18.5
percent at some of the nation's banks, renecting a widespread
weake ning in .demand for business loans, and bank officials and
economists predict further rate reductions .
Co ntinental Illinois National Bank &amp; Trust Co., the 7th-largest U.S.
cormnercial bank , was the only one of the nation's 20 largest banks to
post an i8.5 percent prime. It trimmed its rate a full percentage point,
and some smaller banks matched its rate.

Man receives five year sentence
AKRON, Ohio - Thomas D. Mitchell was sentenced Monday to one
to five years in the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at Lucasville
for destroying evidence in the Constantine R. "Dean" Milo murder
case.
Mitchell, 32, of Norton, Ohio was arrested Dec. 10 in a Dallas suburb
on a charge of aggravated murder. On Feb . 9, Mitchell pleaded guilty
.
to a reduced charge of obstructing justice.
Mitchell's attorneys and prosecutors in the case have declined to say
what evide nce Mitchell destroyed or give details of his involvement in
the case.

Cattle buyer pleads not ~:,ruilty
CINCINNATI - Ca ttle buyer Fernand Allart remained free on
$1,000 bond after pleading innocent in federal court here to five counts
sie nuning from the slaughte r of 287 allegedly diseased beef.
The 4f&gt;.year-old Allart, from Middletown, was the sixth person indicted by a federal gra nd jury following a Nov. 18, 1980, raid on an after-hours slaughter operation at the Robert L. Runtz Inc. plant in Cin-

')

For generations we've been lending money (all kinds of loans
for all kinds of reasons) to businesses and people in our
community. They have deserved our help and we intend to
continue serving them through our responsible and openminded lending policies. After all, the bank that doesn't take
the opportunity to be a part of a community's social and
economic progress is passing up a great investment.
To help, we make the following types of loans: •
• Residential real estate loans to individuals
• ·Home improvement loans
• Commercial loans to small and large businesses
• Consumer loans
• Farm loans
• Education loans

If you get a government check, you can
sign up · for
Direct Deposit at the
Farmers Bank.

who plotted a similar takeover more Civil, Spain's paramilitary federal
than twoyears ago but got only a
police.
·
seven-month sentence; aceepted full
Dozens of Tejera Molina's
responsibility for the latest coup at- followers jwnped from ground-floor
tempt ·but insisted that all non- windows of the Parliament with
commissioned officers and enlisted their submachine guns strapped to
men involved in the takeover be their shoulders after it became clear
given a guarantee against reprisals.
they ~ad no chance of winning.
The hostages were freed after
About 20 of the hostages - inmilitary authorities announced that eluding women deputies and sick
Tejero Molina accepted conditions captives - were freed early today ,
for a "face saving surrender."
and the captors then began surrenTejera Molina at first demanded · dering by the dozens.
he be allowed to surrender in the ofTejera Molina and his followers in
fice of the late dictator Francisco the Guardia Civil seized the lower
Franco. He also insisted that no ar- house and Spain's caretaker Cabinet
my officers or press photographers Monday evening. But the attempted
be allowed to witness his surrender coup seemed doomed shortly after it
to fellow officers of the Guardia was launched .

would level off up river and along
the Kanawha River . The river
crested early Monday at the Belville
and Racine locks.
The Ohio was rising Sunday about
one-half of one-tenth of a foot an
hour at the Gallipolis facility .
Locally, the river flooded out the
lower section of the upstream public
use area below the city park, and the
old lock gates were also submerged
by rising currents. The
Chickamauga Creek also nooded out
lower sections of the city, including

Memorial Field and 'spruce Street
extension.
· Normal flood stage for the city is
set at around 52 feet , according to
city officials.
The National Weather Service announced today the river would crest
in the Cincinnati area at 7 a.m. Thursday. Flood level in the Queen City is
the same as in Gallipolis, 52 feet.
In Pomeroy Monday, water rose to
the level of the municipal parking
lot.

The only area road reported
closed today was SR 338 in Meigs
County in the Antiquity and Long
Bottom area, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol said.
The city weather station in East
Gallipolis said this morning .08 of an
inch oi rain fell on the area overnight. Officials said accumulation
from the weekend would not affect
the decreasing level of the river.
Weather' is expected to be fair
today and Wednesday, with nurries
possible tonight.

Middleport council rejects five 'b ids
By BOB HOEFLICH
Five bids offering to purchase a
village-owned lot at the corner of
Garfield St., and Third Ave., were
rejected when Middleport Village
CounCil met in regular session Monday night:
The lot was given to the village
several years ago by the late Mary
Elizabeth Hartinger Thomas .
Recently, council voted to sell the lot
since no firm suggestions were offered as to ·c ommunity use of the lot.
Last night, council became
deadlocked in a 3-3 vote on whether
to accept one of the bids, but rejected all of them as the result of the tiebreaking vote of Mayor Fred Hoff-

num.
Bids ranged from $1,000 to $8225,
the highest being submitted by Dr.
R. R. Pickens. Several council members feel the lot is worth more than
the top bid . Others, along with
Mayor Hoffman , indicated they do

not believe the village will receive a
received two letters from Ashland
higher bid.
. Oil since the last council meeting
Council, with Mayor Hoffman's two weeks ago with the result being
vote, rejected all five bids and a total of four cents per gallon inagreed to advertise for new bids.
crease on all grades of gasoline.
Voting in favor of a motion for rejecCONFERENCE TODAY
tion of all bids and readvcrtising the
Mayor Hoffman announced a prelot were Allen Lee King, Carl Horky
construction conference on the
and Marvin Kelly while councilmen,
Marina West Sewer Project lor
today with the Holley Brothers who
Dewey Horton , Jack Satterfield and
William Walters voted against the . will build the system and Horton and
Satterfield agreed to represent the;
motion .
Mayor. Hoffman said he is anxious
village at the annual meeting of the
to sell the lot but cast his vole in
Meigs County Board of Health:to be
fa,vor of rejecting the bids arid readheld on March 2 in Pomeroy.
vertising. The lot was appraised
Council voted unanimously to
have
a three mill current expenses
recentlv for $8.000.
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck read a
levy renewed and placed on the
letter from Colwnbia Gas of Ohio
ballot for the June primary elecreporting that natural gas costs on
tions . One-half of the proceeds from
March 6 will reflect an increase of
the levy are used for street light bills
12.3 cents per thousand cubic .feet as
and the other half lor street resura result of the gas cost recovery
facing. Council stressed that the
clause. Buck also reported he has
levy is a renewal and not any additional tax.

At the request of Jeff Darst, a
meeting between fire department
representatives and the fire committee of council was set for 7 p.m.
on March 5 at the fire station.
Another trash hauling permit was
approved for issuance with the und'erstanding that the applicant will
not be pennitted to solicit customers
of other haulers in the community.
Councilman King discussed the
dangers of the erosion of the river
bank in the town and reported that
large sections are breaKing away.
He warned of the dangers to children
who might be along the bank. It was
agreed to have the police patrol the
river bank area more frequently and
warn people of the dangers involved.
Council made plans for placing
limestone in several alleys and a
complaint against the dwnping of
shredded trees in the Broadway St.
area due to the odors involved.

Six people hurt in SR 7 collision.
Six people and one hospitalized in
Injured were Wilson and two
a tw&lt;&gt;-ear crash in Meigs County passengers in his auto, Wiima F .
Monday morning .
Eynon, 68 , Reedsville, and Monte L.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Riffle, 24, Pomeroy. Perkins was
Highway Patrol reported Ricky D. also injured, as were two passengers
Wilson, 23; Reedsville, was nor· . in her car, Dorothy M. Barlow, 59,
thbound on SR 7 at 9:30a.m. and was
Parkersburg, W.Va., and Randy A.
being followed by another vehicle
Perkins, II, Huntington, W.Va.
and an auto driven by Wanda J .
Wilson, the Perkinses and Barlow
Perkins, 41, Huntington, W.Va .
were all taken to Veterans Memorial .
According to the rePQrt, the othe~
Hospital by the Tuppers Plains
vehicle slowed when Wilson
emergency squad, where the
prepared to make a left turn.
Perkinses and Barlow were treated
Perkins' car then passed the other
and released. Wilson was admitted
vehicle and collided with the rear of
for observation.
the Wilson auto.
Eynon and Riffle were also in-

jured in the crash, but not treated.
Severe .damage was reported to
Perkins' car and moderate to the
Wilson auto, and Perkins was citedfor improper parking.
Injury was reported in another
tw()ocar crash in Meigs County Mon. day morning , the patrol said.
Lenora M. Moore, 24, Pomeroy,
and Richard A. Embler, 51 , Colwnbus, were both travelling on the offramp from U.S. 33 to SR 7· at 10:35
a.m. and stopped for traffic.
The rePQrt said Moore then started when she saw an emergency
vehicle approaching, and then stop-

ped. Embler's car collided with the
rear of the Moore auto, causing
moderate damage to both.
Moore was injured. but not
treated, and Embier was cited for
assured clear distance.
. No injury was reported in a onecar accident in Gallia County Mon- .
day morning.
George H. Young, 18, Gallipolis ,
was northbound on CR 5 at 10:15
a.m. when he swerved his car to .
avoid an oncoming vehicle, slid on
cinders and collided with a bridge,
caU.ing severe damage to his car.

cinnati.

Allart was accused of conspiracy to defraud, slaughter of
adulterated cattle, false representation, mixing uninspected and inspected meat and failure to mark condemned meat.

Police identify headless body
l..ONOON, Ky . - '111e headless body of a man was found Sunday
noating in a farm pond in rural Laurel Cqunty, according to Kentucky
~~~~ -

.

County coroner Eddie Bowling ide ntified the body as that of Ray
Wagers, 27, of Manchester, who had been !Hissing since last October.
State police said officers searched the area and found Wagers' head in
a nearby field .
Officers said the body was recovered about 5 p.m., about 12 miles
east of London near the Black Water community. Wagers' body was
found in the pond by Alvin Mills, the owner of the farm.

Ohio winning lottery number

• From time to time the availability or the abo&gt;~t loans may t1avt to be curtelled or llmlltd dtPtndlng on the blnk 'l

CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday In the Ohio
I.ottery's daily ga me "The Number" was 354.
.
The lottery reported earnings of $292,7116 from the wage~mg on the
drawing. Lottery ofricials said sales prior to the drawmg totaled
$954,901.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$662,115.50.

aupply of lendable tunda.

Serving the needs of people who deserve our help.

BANKONETM

15 Cents

A Multime.di.a Inc, Newspaper ·

Possible flood fears lessen

S1f0p

We know the meaning of the word.

1 Section, 12 Pages

300 hostages freed

PTA MOVIE SET

Tlie Pomeroy PTA wiJ1 hold a Walt

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

entine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 24,1981

lr;;;;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~t;~

Patrol cites driver for DWI

VETERANS MEMORIAL .
Saturday Admissions--Lois
Schoonover, Rutland; William l{ennedy, Middleport; Vivian Phelps,
Middleport; William Morris,
Pomeroy; Charles Page, Mason.
Saturday
Discharged--Doris
Haynes, Eula Welker, Bernadine
Meier, Janetta West, Carol Dailey,
otho Karr, Mildred Moore, Corrine
Ferrell, Pamela Diddle, Teresa Canterburg, Reannie Wells, Victor
Braley.
Sunday Admissions--Timothy
Adams, Pomeroy ; Bruce Carman,
Pomeroy; George Moore, Portland;
Mildred Wolfe, Pomeroy; Sharon
Cogar, Syracuse; Lauren Hoffman,
Dexter; John Dill, Middleport ; Mitzi
Ann Lewis, Racine.
Sunday
Discharge--Annette
Oldaker.

Cecile McClanahan, 89, Route 3,
Albany, died Sunday afternoon at
the home of her grandson, Frank
Shiltz, with whom she made her
home.
Born in West Virginia, she was a
daughter of the late William and
Luella Dixon. She was a housewife
and attended the Colwnbia Chapel
Church.
Mrs.McCianahan is survived by a
qaughter, Mildred Smitley, Logan;
two grandchildren, Frank Shiltz,
Albany, and Annette Foster, The
Plains, whom she reared, four other
grandchildren and 15 greatgrandchildren.
Preceding her in death was her
husband , Everett.
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Tuesday at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home , Albany, with the
Rev. Marvin Markins officiating.
Burial will be in the School Lot
Cemetery. The family will receive
·friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to9 p.m. this
evening.

She was preceded in death by her
husband, Ralph Meredith, in 1959:
Funeral services were held at 11
a.m. Saturday at the Ogdin Funeral
Home with the Rev.Baber Morris officiaiing. Burial was in the Elizabeth
K. ofP. Cemetery.

Jr., 25, of Washington Court House, ,
. and David J. Rammell, 42, of
Powell, in a tw&lt;&gt;-car accident north
Main St.
Pomeroy
992-2971
of Colwnbus on U.S. 23 in Delaware
County .
husband,
Kellerin indeath
1976,by
seven
was also Guy
preceded
her
COLUMBUS- Charles E. Koons,
sisters and four brothers.
38, of Colwnbus, in a one-car acMrs. Keller was a member of the
cident in Colwnbus.
Middleport United Pentecostal
PAINESVILLE -Carl M. Safick,
Church.
17, of Madison, in a one-c~r smashup
Surviving are two daughters,
on0hio84 in Lake County.
Mabel Pearman, Middleport, and
COLUMBUS~ Palmer Self, I3, of
Mrs. Eleanor Larson, Minnesota;
to the tractor.
Colwnbus,
when struck by a van on three sons, Gene Keller, Middleport;
There were no injuries and
Weber Road in Colwnbus.
Guy Keller, Jr., Salem Center, and
Calvert was cited by the patrol. ·
SATURDAY
John Keller, Orient, and three granTroopers also investigated a oneCLEVELAND - Marie Harris, 33, dchildren .
.car crash in Meigs County Sunday
of Cleveland, in a one-car accident
Funeral services will be held at
afternoon.
on Interstate 71 in Cleveland.
1:30 p.m . Tuesday at the Middleport
According to the report, Paul
REYNOLDSBURG - Guy L. United Pentecostal Church with the
Milliron, '1:1, Rt. 2, Racine, was eastCusick
; 20, of Reynoldsburg , in a Rev. William Knittel officiating.
boundonSR338at 1:25 p.m. when he
ooe-car
accident on Ohio 256 near The body will lie in state at the churlost control of his vehicle on high
from Playtex "Cross Your Heart&lt;!'
Columbus
suburb.
the
ch one hour preceding the services.
water and collided with a guard rail,
COLUMBUS - Edward L. Ranf~
Friends may call at the Rawlingscausing heavy damage . Milliron was
18,
of Colwnbus, in a tw&lt;&gt;-car ac- Coats-Blower Funeral Home from 2
not injured.
Special Introductory Price
cident on a city street.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Burial will
BATAVIA- Walter T. Abner, 48, be in Miles Cemetery.
LAND TRANSFERS .
Soft Cup #600 in white or beige
Felicity,
in a one-car accident on
Dennis I. Boothe, Irma J ..Boothe
Lelah
Meredith
(34/36A, 34/40B,C) $7.99
Ohio
133
in
Clermont
County.
to Roger Hayman, Luvenia
CHAGRIN
FALLS
Ian
S.
MacHayman, .9 acre, Chester.
Mrs. Lelah Meredith, 92, Parkerdiarmid, 'P, of Willowick, in a one- sburg, died Wednesday at St. Joseph
Ronald J . Browning, Anna
Lightly Lined #646 in beige
Browning, Ronald K. Browning to car accident on a Geagua County Hospital.
(32/36A, 32/38B,C) $8.99
She was born in Elizabeth, W. Va .,
Dale Lee Browning, Lot 135, Mid- road.
ST. MARY'S Herbert A. a daughter of the late George and
dleport.
Jr.
23,
of
Minster,
in a one- ·Frances Dye.
Leugers
Offer ends April 25, 1961
Melody R. Hoschar to William E.
car
accident
on
an
Auglaize
County
Bartels,1.3 acres, Salisbury.
Surviving are a son, Richard C.
.•
Meredith of Pomeroy;
two
Alva J. Coates, Mary J . Coates to road.
ASHLAND
Charles
W. Myers,
Robert L. Taylor, Kathy M. Taylor I
daughters, Wilm" Provance and
53, of Ashland in a car-pedestrian ac- Thelma Fielder of Parkersburg, six
acre, Chester.
cident on U.S. 250 in Ashland County.
grandchildren and 11 greatWARREN- Edward L. Burrows,
Marcus Moore, Gertrude Moore to
grandchildren.
35, of Louisville, in a one-car acLowell Ridenour, Pauline Ridenour,
cident on U.S. 62 in Trwnbull Coun- r-------~-----1-----------------------Parcel, Cllester.
ty.
Ethel T. Weise, dec. to Gordon A.
FRIDAY NIGHT
Weese, John M. Weese, Clarence B.
COLUMBUSBenjamin Miller, 25,
Weese, Paul H. Weese, Cert. Trans.,
of
Zanesville,
while
jogging on a
Meigs.
Colwnbus street.

The patrol counts weekend traffic
By The Associated Press
deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midOhio traffic accidents claimed 14
lives - half of them in the Greater night Sunday.
Colwnbus area- over the weekend.
The dead:
SUNDAY
AU but two of the fatal accidents involved only one vehicle, the High- DELAWARE - James R. Hunter
way Patrol said.

A tw&lt;&gt;-vehicle accident in Gallia
County resulted in a DWI citation for
an area man Saturday afternoon.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Steven Calvert,
20, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was northbound
on SR 160 at 1:30 p.m. when he attempted to pass a tractor driven by
Dnna Greene, 16, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Calvert then swung his vehicle
back into !be northbound lane and
collided with the tractor, causing
heavy damage to his car and slight

Friends may caii at 'the funeral
home today, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Military graveside rites will also be
conducted.

--

Farmers
Bank

Member FOIC

Your. Community Owned Bank

Weather
Member FDIC

Mostly cloudy with scattered snow nurries tonight. Lows in the up:
(&gt;Cr 20s. Partly sunny Wednesday. Highs near 50. Chance of
prec ipitation 30 PQrcent tonight and near zero percent Wednesday.
Winds westerly t&lt;l northwesterly 1()-2() mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Thursday through Saturday: Fair through
the period. Highs in the 40s to lower 50s Thursday and in the 40s •'riday
and Saturday. Lows in the mid-21ls lo mid·30s .

SVAC CAGE CHAMPIONS - For !be fifth slraiKht year, lhe
Soutllem Valley Athlellc . Conference championship belongs to the
Southern Tornadoes. Coach Carl Wolfe's team defeated Eastern last
Friday night for the league Iitie.
Into Friday's sectional loul'

Goi"'

namenl championship, !be team has an 111-3 record. Team members are,
front row, Jell to rlpt, Joe ·Bob Hemsley, Tom Roseberry, Allen Pape aDd
Terry McNickle. Backrnw, Rlebard Wolfe, paul Cardone, Jay Rees, Dale
Teaford, Robert BroWD, Dwayne Curfman and Kent Wolfe.

�Commentary

Pomtt•z

.

Southwestern, Southern, HT Wildc~ts
advance in Class A .S ectional play

Page--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
_!.uesday, February 24,1981

Learn those names, Mr•.Clark____--:-____J_ul_ian_Bo_nd_
ment, in ending racist repression,
know the names of that continent's
dictatorship, starvatign and war.
major figures .
Mr. Clark, the prline minister of
He should know because one
South Africa is P. W. Botha. His is
African country, Nigeria, is our
the country in which the white
second leading supplier of oil.
minority denies the black majority
He should know because one
every human right. It is also the
African country, Nigeria, is our
country whose troops regularly insecond leading supplier of oil.
vade Angola and Mozambique.
He should know because Africa is
an important sauce of minerals and
other raw materials as well as a
growing market for U. S. goods.
He should know because events in
Southern Africa threaten to erupt into a racial war.
During his presidential campaign,
Ronald Reagan revealed that he did
not know much more about Africa
than does Clark. The new president
and his advisers seem to view
Africans as dispensable pawns in an
ideological struggle between the
United States and the Soviet Union.
But Africa's problems are not
caused by Soviet subversion. They
stem, instead, from centuries of ex·
ploitation and domination by the
faded colonial powers of Europe.
Africa's problems can only be
solved by international assistance in
which the United States can play a
leading role.
Some of Reagan's advisers have
suggested that aid to Africa be sharply cut. Others have said that surplus U. S. food sent to hungry nations
- many of them in Africa - should
be used as a weapon to starve the unfriendly into America's arms.
These policies .are not calculated
to win friends and Influence people
either here or In abroad.
After all, more than 10 percent of
the U. S. population · has African
roots. And every American has a
NEW YORK (AP) -This is prime
sta~e In Africa's peace!~ develop- _ time for the economic experts, as
sometimes they are mistakenly
called. In the Reagan economic
scenario they have something to
dissect, and they will peck away
Ill COW1Sb'eft
voraciously.
"11merny, 011.111
C1.. !19!-U51
From the universities and think
DEVOTED TOniE INTEREST OF THE MF.IGS-~N AREA
tanks and oJH!d pages they will have
their say. They will sympathize and
criticize. They will condescend.to explain how ideas are naive and why
programs can't work.
Supporting economists, primed
ROBERT L. WINGETr
for
the battle, will answer in kind.
PublJ•btr
They will be learned, provocative,
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
intolerant, and outraged.
A,sl1taat PlbliJhtr/CilatrGUtr
Ge~teral Manager
Economists who hadn't been
heard from in ages will feel
resurrected, and they will write ponDALE ROTHGEB, JR.
tifical reports on the similarities and
New1 Editor
differences between now ·and then.
They'll tell you what they'd do, and
A MEMEER of 11te Associated Prtts, IDliDd Oall)' Preu Allotiatloa aad tbe
Americau Neowspaptor Publ11ht:n ASioelation.
while doing it they'll make a final attempt to correct what they see as an
LE'ITERS OF OPINION art 'lt'tleomed. Thty tbould be Ins tbaD 300 words loDg. AU

What would you think of a football
coach who didn't know the names of
his players?
Or a general who didn't know the
name of the opposing army?
Or a diplomat who didn't know the
names of the world leaders with
whom his country must deal?
Not much, right•
Sadly, there is such a diplomat. He
is William P. Clark Jr., the former
California Supreme Court judge who
recently became this country's
deputy secretary of state.
The deputy secretary is the No. 2
man in the federal department that
sets and enforces U. S. foreign
policy. One minimal requirement
for that post ought to be knowing the
names of the heads of important
foreign governments.
So, it came as a great shock to
hear Clark admit to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee that
he did not know the names of the
prime ministers of South Africa and
Zimbabwe.
Clark's ignorance apparently does
not end at Africa's borders. He
frankly admitted to th,e senators that
he knew little or nothing about the
rest of ·the world. Probably he is
aware that the Japanese make cars
and television sets and that the
French make post cards and wine.
Unfortunately, Clark is not alone.
Most Americans do not know the
names of African heads of state.
Most Americans do not know the
difference betwen Cairo and Cape
Town, betwen Milton Obote and !di
Amin, between Senegal a'J].~ Sierre
Leone.
Most of us do not have to be experts on Africa. But the deputy
secretary of state should at least

or ·

The Daily Sentinel

..

letters are sabjeel 10 edttla£ aDd mllJI be 1iped with ume, address aod telephooe
number. No WlligDtd ltttfrs •ill he pubUsbed. Lenen should 1M! 111 good taste, addres1iDg
luurs, Dot ptrsooalltlts.

Way others see it.

·

• •

Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers during the past
week.
LANCASTER EAGLE-GAZETI'E - " Ravenna's state record-setting
teachers' strike and walkouts by City employees in Steubenville, Springfield
and, while briefly. Crooksville, underscore a pressing need for the General
Assembly (which has its share of pressing burdens) to finally take some action to ·either repeal the decayed Ferguson Act or to re\\Tite it with a
requirement that those whose responsibility it is to enforce it do so.
"The act prohibits strikes by public employees. It has been ignored. Public
employees tested it and found those in authority reluctant to enforce it. Both
'sides, therefore, have violated the law. Failure to enforce the law is no less
excusable than breaking it.. ..
"Strikes in the private sector are between labor and management, and
while they can and often do cause discomfort for other citizens, the decision
to strike is a private affair. Those in the public sector affect lives, property
and the well-being of students.
" Binding arbitration legislation must be written to ensure both sides be
treated fairly and stipulate that refusal by either side to honor the decision of
a third party (parties) is a violation of the law subject to dismissal from
public service; applying equally to all concerned."
DAYTON JOURNAL HER-ALD - "The Justice Department is correct in
suing more college students for defaulting on millions of dollars worth of
federal loans. The suits should be pursued with the greatest vigor.
"Nationally, the deadbeats total well over 800,000, and their nwnbers are
increasing.
"In southwestern Ohio, there are 501 former students who have repeatedly
ignored letters and phone calls from their college bursars (or collection
agencies acting for the colleges). They had only to acknowledge old debts
·and provide some assurances they would start repaying them. But they
didn't.
" ... The tragedy in all this is that s~udents who have benefited then ignored
an obligation to repay, leave a fine program in disrepute.
"They ruin it for others who need help at a time when college costs are
soaring.
' 'The lesson for a budget-consciou:; Reagan administration is elementary :
a program that benefits smart delinquents at the expense of all taxpayers
deserves to be cut."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Members
of President Reagan's Cabinet and
members of Congress are having. a
few misunderstandings as they try
to size each other up.
At a hearing before the Joint
Economic Conunittee, Sen. Roger
W. Jepsen, R-lowa, shifted between
calling budget director David Stockman "Mr. Secretary" and "Mr.
Director. ••
At one point Jepsen asked: " What
is your title?"
Stockman, the architect of
Reagan's package of $41 billion in
proposed budget cuts, replied : " I've
been called a number of things in
recent weeks."

'5

\'

11 1\~}
I

°

•

II '. '.

I '

I

~

~~~

Hfgh school ratings

TIGIIT DEFENSE- Kyger Creek's Keith Clark 14) and David Sands
(10) seem to bave Southern's Duane Curfman pinned in but he manages
10 fire It the basket anyway during Monday's Class Sectional Tour-

There will be special commentary
from Colwnbia Professor Arthur
Burns, because he served both as adviser to President Eisenhower and
chairman of the Federal Reserve,
and be caus e, correctly or
mistakenly, he is seen as the
epitome of responsible conservatism.
Milton Friedman, who carefully
avoided the Washington scene and
who, therefore , ·has avoided being
branded as one whose policies
failed , will be sought by the media
becau:;e of his strong conservative
views, his independence, and his
popularity with the masses.
You will even be hearing from
Adam Smith, Karl Marx , John
Stuart Mills, and John Maynard
Keynes - by way o( self-appointed
proxies.
But out of all this, what good will
come to the people of America ?
Robert Lekachrnan, an economist

unfair historical representation of
their views and deeds.
In the past week, the president of
the United States has presented for
consideration the most sweeping
economic program since President

Roosevelt and the Great Depression
of the '30s.
It was presented as a vast unit, its
parts intricately related in an
organic whole that reveals the whole
political-economic philosophy of the
new president. For economists, it is
a feast , not a tidbit.
From Columbia you will hear
from Professor Raymond Saulnier
(j;:isenhower). Professor Walter
Heller (Kennedy) will critique from
Minnesota. Kenneth Galbraith (Kennedy) will report from Harvard.
Prof~ssor Paul McCracken (Nixon )
will write from Michigan. Professor
Herbert Stein (Nixon ) will declaim
from Virginia, and Professor Herman Kahn (Carter) from Cornell.

who examines other economists, has
written a book on the subject called
" Economists At Bay ," subtitled,
"Why the experts will never solve
your problems."
He begins with a question: "When
bright people say stupid things, the
question inevitably arises, why is
their perception of reality so
blurred• Good economists are
.
bright men and women."
You get the gist without waiting
for his conclusion. Economists, he
says, do not always address themselves to what is significant, and
when they do, theY. do not always
make significant contributions.
What economists must do, he
suggests, is " rethink old assumptions, old certainties, and old emphases.''

But don't bet on it. Chances are
that what you hear over the next few
years will be a rechewing of old
argiunent.

One of them, he noted, was " Deep
Cut. "

There also was some confusion at
another committee hearing as Sen.
Paula Hawkins, R·Fla.. tried to
show her support for one of
Reagan 's proposed budget cuts,
Trying to deflate claims by Rep.
Fred Richmond, D-N. Y., that food
stamps - which Reagan wants to
cut - were a preventive health
program, Mrs. Hawkins facetiously
asked Regan whether the nation's
health would be improved if
everyone were given food stamps.
" Absolutely," Regan replied.Looking a bit perturbed, she

repeated the question. This time
Regan said no.
" I thought you misunderstood the
question," Mrs. Hawkins smiled after finally getting the answer she
wanted.
Other Cabinet members have been
on the receiving end of needling some gentle and some not - from
Democrats as they testified before
congressional panels.
When Energy Secretary James
Edwards appeared before a House
subcommittee in defense of
Reagan's decision to remove price

controls on domestic crude oil, Rep.
Edward Mark ey , D-Mass .,
mimicked Reagan by first holding

up a large graph and then holding up,
a dollar bill. It was the same thing,
the president had done - althougll
for different purposes - in I(
nationally broadcast economic ad-o;
dress.
" Mr. Secretary," Markey told a1\
obviously uncomfortable Edwardsl
" can you honestly say people are
better off today than they were on
Jan. 28 ?" That's when Reagan
decontrolled oil.
•
One of Reaijan's campaign line~
last fall was that voters. should asltI
themselves whether they were bet,
ter off then than they were when
Jimmy Carter came to power foWl
years earlier.
'

forts. "There remain literally ·
millions of conservation opportunities where the cost is an outstanding bargain," says Thomas E.
Stelson of the Georgia Institute of
Technology.
Energy demand grew at an
average rate of 3 percent annually
during the 1970s. But that growth is
projected to average less than I percent a year during the 1980s, says
Joel Darmstadter of the
Washington-based Resources for the
Future.
Roger W. Sant or ·carnegie Mellon
University of Pittsburgh offers an
even me optimistic vjew. Total
domestic energy demand in 1990 will ·
be I percent less than it was in 1980,
he predicts, while the average
growth rate during the I(JOOs will be
only I percent a year.
"The inflationary impact of the
energy sector is essentially over,"

adds Sant. "Opportunities for
providing energy to people at coslll
they can afford are immense.
fact, the opportunities are far gretet
than the problems ."
Imports of crude oil, no"
averaging 8.5 million barrels peli
day, will be reduced by more than
twt&gt;-thirds by 1990 - and the United
States will not be importing oil by
the turn of the century.
•
" We see oil falling out ·or the pioture very fast, .with natural gas
coming on very strong" - at least
until federal price controls on gas
are removed and It becomes as expensive as oil, he says.
,
Dcmestic supplies of natural gas
are plentiful enough to support coO:.
swnption through the end of this century at the rate of 22 trillion to 24
trillion cubic feet annually, a level Of
demand identical to that of recen!
years .

In

DOONESBURY'
.4Til*! I

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lOth. ninth and Kettering Alter
In Class AA, Elyria Catholic
wound up fourth, Circleville Logan ·
Elm fifth , Hillsboro sixth, Navarre
Fairless seventh, Millersburg West
Holmes eighth, Portsmouth ninth
and New Matamoras Frontier loth.
In Class A, Marian Stein Marion
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Zanesvi lie Rosecrans sixth, Old
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Kalida eighth, McDcnald ninth and
Jewett-Scio lOth.

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HOPIJ IT /5 ..

second in Class AAA with 242 points
with Chillicothe, 1!HI, ranked third
with 208.
Willard, unbeaten in 19 regular
season games. earned the Class AA
championship even though the Wildcats have one home game left with
Upper Sandusky on Friday. Willard
collected 275 points, second-ranked
Struthers 2fiO and No. 3 Napoleon
210. Struthers and Napoleon won all
20 of their regular season assignments .
Badger also went 20-0, piled up 275
points and won the Class A ratings
crown by 64 points over runner-up
Co lumbu s Academy, 20-0 .
Covington, also unbeaten in 2Q
games this season, finished third
with 189 points.
Canton South finished fourth in
Class AAA with Dayton Roth fifth,
Columbus Brookhaven sixth,
Steubenville seventh, Mansfield
Senior eighth, Cleveland John

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Bulldogs win
~p championship
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Canton
McKinley's Bulldogs won a recordtying fifth big school championship
today in The Associated Press' Ohio
schoolboy basketball final 1981
ratings.
Mea~while, Willard In Class AA
and Kinsman Badger in Class A
were celebrating their first
statewide basketball poll titles.
McKinley's fifth title tied the 20-0
Bulldogs for the most large division
"crowns with Middletown. The Canton school's other crowns carne in
· 1965,1966, 1974and 1976.
McKinley now begins Its bid for its
first stale tournament championship, making its debut Friday
night against Ravenna in the Canton
Class AAA Sectional.
McKinley walloped Canton
Tlmken 93-52 in its past regular
season game and earned 29-1 points
in the final balloting by a statewide
panel of sports writ~rs and broadcasters. Hamilton, also 20-0, finished

•

i&amp;ili«tsE

nament at Meigs High ·School. Closing In Is KC's leff Moles, 130).
Soulllero advanced to the championship game Friday night with an 81-SG
victory. Scott WoUe photo.

WASIDNGTON (NEA) - THE
from other fuels, notably coal, could
" energy crisis" has ended.
produce a reduction in oil prices
during the 1980s and 1990s, say the
That's the good news from a panel
of energy experts assembled here
most optimistic members of theN AS
recently by the National Academy of
panel.
Sciences.
Their exceptionally sanguine
In fact , if an "energy crisis" is
outlook differs markedly from the
defined as a lack of adequate fuel ,
widely accepted dire warnings of
there never was one during the 1970s
recent years that the next two
-: with the exception of two
decades are likely to be a period of
relatively brief periods of gasoline
painful technological transition and
shortages, in the winter of 1973-74
insufficient fuel supplies.
and in the spring of 1979.
According · to these theories,
What did occur during the past
existing reserves of conventional
fuels, especially oil and gas, have
decade was an unprecedented
escalation in the price of crude oU,
been dwindling rapidly , while new
leading to rapid acceleration in the
technolQgies - including solar
cost of gasoline, home heating oil,
energy, nuclear fusion and synthetic
aviation fuel and scores of other
fuels - will not become competrolewn products.
mercially feasible until after the
But a drastically reduced rate of
turn of the century. ·
' energy de mandd urmg
· t he
But the 51'tuatr'o11 now has 1·mgro wth rn
remainder of the 20th century,
proved dramatically because of
coupled with increased competition across-the-board conservation ef.------------, ,----------,

Pin

ward Dale Newberry with 16 polnis; BrownandCurfmanhadeightpolnts 5; Burleson 4-5·13; Howell 4·1-9;
As expected, Southwestern and
Newberry 7·2·16; Baker 4·4·12;
Southem emerged u winners Mon-. Jay BurlesOn had 13 and Todd Baker apiece.
Slerrell 3·0·6. Totals 23·1H4.
.
'
day night In the opening round of the added 12. .
Sands led KC with 18 points while
By quarters:
Keith Payne, one of the omallest Junior center Tim Barr added nine. Southwestern
Class A Sectional buketball tour16 1-i 17 17-6-4
6 14 13 17- 50
nament at Meigs High School.
playe" on the floor, wu the game's Southern sank 34 of 73 attempts for North Gallia
·
Southern (81)- Teaford 11 ·6·2•;
Coach Uoyd Myers' Southwestern top scorer with 21 points on eight 47 percent andl4ofl7 atthef ul Cll"
Frederick 1·0·2; R. Wolfe 4-G-I; Car·
Highlanders handily defeated North baskets and five free throws.
cles.
done l·D-6 ; Brown 2·4·1; Rees I·G-2;
Gallia, 84-60 while Southern, the
Greg Dee! w the only other Pirate
The Bobcats hit 18 of 44 for 41 per- K. Wolle 6+13; Roseberry 0-2-2;
centandl3of30atthefoulllne.
McNickle 2·0·4 and Curfman 4-G-1.
SVAC champ and Meigs' sectional in double figures with 12 points.
Totals
34·13·81.
winner the past four years, blasted · Southwestern connected on 2.'l of 47
Kyger Creek finished Its seasQn
Kyger Creek (50) - sands 6·6·18;
Kyger Creek, 81-lio. Southwestern floor attempts for 49.percent and 18 witha6-14record.
Barr 3·3·9; Porter 2· 3-7; Moles 4·0·8;
WHdcaiBWID
Helms 2·0·4 and Love 1·2·4. Totals IS·
faces Eastern Wednesday for the of 27 at the foul circles.
14·50.
right to meet Southern in Friday's
North Gallia sank 20of 55 attempts
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
By quarters:
tournament champinship.
for' 36 percent and 10 of 20 at the Trace Wildcats advanced to the southern
22 19 23 17- 81
6 15 13 16-50 .
SW·NG
charily stripes. The Highlanders semi finals of Wednesday's Class A . K. C.
Box Score
With four players hitting double held a 31-25 rebounding edge as Sectional at Ironton High School
Hannan Trace (51)- Jones 2·5·9;
figures, Southwestern captured the · ,Baker grabbed with eight caroms.
Monday with a 51-46 victory over Pack 6·1·13; Chapman 1·3·5; Petrit
1·4·6; Webb 6·6·18. Totats16·19·51.
evening's first game Monday.
The win gave Southwestern a lG-11 Symmes Valley.
h
W'ld
t
k
Symmes Valley (46) - Burcham
·
The Highlanders jwnped Into a season mark while North Gallia
Pacmg t e I ca attac were 2·1·5;
CraWford 2·2-6; Herrell:6·5·17;
nearly lfl..6lead at the end of the first finished with a 5-14mark.
GregWebband~odneyPackwith16
Miller 3·0·6; Saunders 0·2·2;
period then held a 30-20 advantage at
andl3pointsrespectively.
Wiseman 1·2·4 and Myers 3-0·6.
KC.SOUthero
Jim Herrell led the Vikings with 17 Totals 17·12-46.
the haU. SWHS. led 47-33 going into
Using a. pressing defense,
By quarters:
the final canto:
Southern jwnped into a 12-0 lead points. Symmes Valley jwnped into Hannon Trace
8 9 19 15--51
Pacing the attack were senior for- with 4:32 left in the first period a 13-3 first period lead and led 20-17 r-'S'-'y-"m-"m-"e:..:s,;;V..:a;;,;ll,;;.ey:.,__..:,13:.,_7~12:.,..:.14-;;,;;:#
enroute to a lopsided 81-50 win over at the haU before HT got untracked
Kyger Cree~ in the second game of · in the third period.
Monday's Class A Sectional at Meigs
Both teams · had bad shooting
High School.
nights as the Wildcats hit 16 of 52
Dale Teaford, 6-2 senior center, from the floor while SV canned just
COLUMBUS, OIU&gt; (AP) - Her&lt;'s how
a statewide panel of eporta writers and
was all but unstoppable 8s he collec- seven of 51.
•• y..., &lt;Mi&lt;o of ooy •
broadcuten ranka Ohio hilh achool boys
ted 28 points, 18 in the first haU to · Hannan Trace grabbed 28 reboun- toppi....... $4.0oll
buketboll leama In lhe final _poll lh~
week fill' The Aaoc:lllled Preoa wilh 10
lead the Tornado onslaught. Before ds and committed 18 turnovers. The
polnta lor firat to one point for lOth:
$2.50 .
Oroty •
the Initial period ended, Southern Wildcilts face Oak Hill Wednesday
CLASSMA
I, Cantoo McKinley, »0, IH poln~ .
held a 2U lead.
evening. The winner of that contest
STARTS MONDAY
2, Hamilton, 20-0, U2.
The Tornadoes continued their meets Green in the tournament's
3, ChliUC&lt;llhe, 19-4, :1111.
4, Canton South, 1~1 , lf'i.
assault In the second stanza with a 19 championship game Friday.
S, O.ytoo Roth, lt-1, Ill.
point effort led by Teaford's nine
Box Scores
8, Colwnbua Brookhaven, 1H, 124.
7, Steubenville, 19--1, 114.
North Gallia (50) - Blackburn 1·1·
points and four by Kent WoUe.
I, 1\Uillfleld Senior, 17·2, 1113.
Shriver 3·0·6; Payne 8·5·21; Shaw
David Sands led Kyger Creek's of. '3;
9, Clevelond Adams, lt-2, 38.
1·0·2; Lee . 0·1·1; Queen 2·1·5; and
•
. AU LOCATIONS
•
Ill, Kellerlng Alter, 11-3, II. ·
fense in the second period with 10 Deel5·2·12. Totals21H0·50.
Other achooJa rec:elvU\g 10 or more
Southwestern (64)- Sizemore 2·1 ·
points.
· points : 11, Alhena 31. 12, Newark 26. 13,
Akron Centrai·Hower · 21. U, YOWll:alown
With Richard Wolfe, Kent Wolfe . - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - . . _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - Suulh li. U, Cleveland St. Isnathu lt. 18,
and Duane Curfman joining the
Cincinnati Ekter 1t. 17 (Ue), Mansfield
Madison and Lor1ln Sottthview 15. 19, Toscoring parade, Southern held a 64ledu Macomber II.
34lead going into the final q1141rter.
CLASSAA
I , Wllllnl. 111-11, !7S.
Wolfe W&amp;.! the only other Tornado
2, Slnalhers. IHI, 160.
hitting
double figures with 13 points.
3, Napoleon, 20-0, 210.
4, Elyria CallroUc, 111-1, 1711.
Three Tornadoes, R. Wolfe, Robert

names!

Is the energy ctisis over?.._____R_o_be_rt_W._al_ters~;

.

j

As a former judge, you are usell to
making decisions based on the facts.
If you learn the facts, you will have
to decide that the United States
should stand in favor of freely elected governments and against rac;,t
dictatorships.
.
But please, Mr. Clark, learn those

Confusion follows ·some committee hearings

COLUMBUS DISPATCH - "Consensus Is established among utility
customers- there mu:;t be a better rate-making mechanism than the Public
··
UtilitiesConullissionofOhio.
"Give public officials credit, they sense that concern and have come up
with valuable suggestions on how to improve the public utility service picture in Ohio. Trouble is, minor distractions are being raised to cloud the piclure ....
. "One reason given for the need to restructure ... is that the PUCO is too
SO WHAT
politicized. And some who nurture this criticism are politicizing efforts to
{)//} RJCI&lt;
j S4Y 70
depoliticize the PUCO.
"Public utility customers do not pay their bills according to their political ' TIIATf
\
persuasion- they pay through the nose. And they deserve better treatment
from those who claim to be addressing their concerns."
f
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICA-TOR - "Cleveland's Mayor George V.
Volnovich, who failed last November to get the voters to approve increasing
their income tax from 1.5 percent to 2 percent, won vindication Tuesday in a
special election.
"Opposing the increase was Dennis J. Kucinich, the young former mayor
whom Volnovich had defeated for rt~election after the city went into default
by
miilion. Kuclnich fought the proposal last November, and he fought it
hard this time.

Th~se two men are enemies, Mr.
Clark, but each wants to be our
friend. We can't be friendly with
both for long, so you will have to help
the president ·and the secretary of
state decide between the two.
Study the situatlon. Learn more
names and places. Read some
history.

The prime minister of Zimbabwe
is Robert Mugabe. His is the country
that used to be called Rhodesia .
Mugabe is the man who waged a
guerrilla war against the country 's
white-minority regime and won a
free election over the objections of
many of the ,people in and around the
!;\eagan State Department.

The Daily Sentinei-Paae--3

Middleport. Ohio

Pameroy, Oh.

138

132
106

.

'

When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
·
They're all parts of the Bowman family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems , and
asked the General Telephone
Communications Consultant for
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
mo~ey,t' said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet .each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer feature is very
important. Now we get aft,er-hours calls at
home - these are almost always very important calls."
~~===::;;;;..---;:
Our Communications Consultants
•
have only one job: to make your telecommunications better and better.
We have what you need.

�..... Io
Pomeroy-Mlddl 11eort, ..,..

Tuesday, February 24, 19!1

Friendly .Circle hears two views of life
tcplc presented by Mrs. Donald
Hauck when Friendly Circle rL
Trinity Church met Tuesday
evening.
"All of life has two views, a good
and a bad view. Others cannot
chooee our view for us and we must
plan what we will see each day,"
said Mrs. Hauck. The r:Lfering was
received by Mrs. Roy Mayer and a
poem, "It All Depends on You" and
prayer- by the leader cl~ the
program.
Mrs. Hauck presided at the
business meeting with reports being
given by .Mrs. Leonard Jewell and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr., secretary
and treasurer. A contribution was
made to the Church Council on the
gas bilL
Members signed a card for Mrs.
David Russell whose daughter,
Mary Elaine, was born on Feb. 8. A
thank you note for flowers from Mrs.
Russell was noted.
Mrs. Hauck thanked members for
thoughtfulness during her recent
hospitaliultion, and several notes of
appreciation for holiday remembrances were hesrd. Mrs. Lawrence
FOOD, DRUGS AND COSMETICS - Ruth
~·~lsb~ltand Teresa Hoog, Collliumer Affairs Officers,
:1.:
. •ood aDd Drug Administration, wW be at the Meigs
~ultipurpose BufidlDg on March 17 for a meeting on
::7eod additives, generic or no-name brands and
:.'QbeUng, generic drugs, and f~g Interactions, as
..,' I(I!U as cosmetics. Tbe meeting wW be open to the

public with reservatlollli to be made with the Meigs
County Extelllilon Office before March 10. ~lured
here as they worked on plans for the seminar are Ex·
tension Homemakers County Council members,
Esther hardeR, Virginia Salser, and Ire~ Parker,
seated left to right, with Diana Eberts, extelllilo~r
agent

fJaptist women meet recently
....
: :A goal of $150 was set for the Annie
:lnnstrong Hme Missions to be
~ken during March and April when
J)le Baptist Women of the First
~uthem Baptist Church met recen$ at the home of Donna Spencer.
·-Sylvia Zwiling was appointed sun::elwie girl for the group and will have
!clwu-ge of sending cards to mem~rs. The group will also purchase
:filys for the preschool Sunday school
~Gasses.

:; March 16 at 6:30p.m. was set for
~e family covered dish dinner to be
~ld at the church. Guests will in;clude Scioto Valley Director of
:lllssions, tbe Rev. Clifford Coleman
:lpd his family, members and frienlls of the Hope Baptist Chapel of Mid-

dleport, and the Rev. and Mrs. Art
Bingham, area home missionaries
who served at German Village in
Colwnbus. The Rev. Mr. Bingham
will present a slide presentation and
speak about the mission outreach in
that area.
Janet Matthews gave the call to
prayer, naming missionaries whose
birth dates fall on that day. The
program was presented by Betsy
Newman and Donna Spencer with
the study being on Southern Bapitist
missionaries and their work in
Brazil.
Next meeting wili be April 21 at
the home of Janet Matthews. olhers
attending were Racheal Lefebre,
Sadie Karr, and Sue King.

.Dinner welcomes pastor

Church class has
bowling party

Social
TUESDAY
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY; Racine Post 602, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. Buckeye Girls'
State delegate and alternate to be
selected.
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY, Drew Webster Post,
39, jlinior and senior meeting, 7::«1
p.m. Tuesday with Mrs. Florence
Richards, Americanism district ~---_:_...:_..:_..:_..:_..:_::...;:_:_:_:__:__:_...:__:__:_.:_------t
'chairman, guest speaker.
MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY
Area Branch, American Association
of UniverSity W?men, 7,:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. Mrs.
Ellen Ball to speak on "Facing the
Problem of Abuse."
HARRISONVILLE
SENIOR ·
CITIZENS CLUB, 7 p.m. Tuesday
TRS-80 MODEL Ill
with Susan Rogers to show slides on
• Compact Integrated
Indonesia. Refreshments.
Design With Bullt·l.n 12"
POMEROY CHAPTER of Past
Monllor Fits Easily on a
Matrons Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Desktop
home of Marjorie Crow.
• Over 80 Ready-lo·Run
LADIES AUXILIARY, Veterans
Programs to ChoOM
Memorial Hospital, 7:30 Tuesday
From, Or Write Your Own
nigllt at the hospital. All members
Programs For Business I
urged to attend.
Per.sonal Uae
·.·.~~::­
_,.,,, ,,,,,..,..,
.
• Easy Internal E•panslon
. --~ MEET TONIGHT
48K and 2 Disk Drives
· Aspecial meeting of Racine Lodge
- - -- ---- . • The Perfect Slarter
461, Ft.AM, wiD be held at 7:30p.m.
Computer That Grows
Tuesday with work in the EA and FC
with Your Needs
Degrees.

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to an IRS auc:IH.
o True D False

it's 111.UE. Whcn·H&amp;R Diode prqlfllfS )001'

rdvm. it's oomcone who lalows all about Income

..

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.

- --

.

RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000.
AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS
AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS.

.

....

The Saving Place""

Open Daily 9-9, Sunday 1-6

·WED. THRU SAT. SAU

Sat. 9-6

Quulity ·parts
and·service

1-::-:l~~+--+-~+:-1::

••••
....
•••••
•••••
••••
•••
•••••

4'3:88

1.16
2.44

Plus F.E.T. 1.73 Each
Savei'KM tadlal225'
Steel leltecl ladlol
• Radial tire mlleog8
• Popular P metric

sizes

Complimentary

• 5 rib tread

TilE MAifTEJWI:E

All Tires Plus
F.E.T. Each

EVEFI't' S 000 MilES fOR ltiE UH
OF YOUP. l mit I IIRES ANYK marl
STO~E WH ICH SEllS kmJ•I
B~A NO TIRES Will PERFORM

.,

WITHOUT CHAIIG( IH(S£ MA IN·

!£NANCE SERIIICES

.,xo,_

PrD~*fly f'l&lt;&gt;ll!l l'ftl

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fnoro...gl'l~ lni!&gt;KI T'' "

•

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s

KNIGHTS TEMPLAR TO MEET
'l'lle Order of Red Cross and Order
of malta will be conferred when Ohio
Valley Commandery 24, Knights
Templar, meets in regular session at
7:30 p.m. ~ednesday.

&gt;

i

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Wildwood Garden Club will ,
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Marcia Arnold.

c:::.

I

sggg

'lbe Ladles Auxlllary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday night at the holpllal.
All members are urged to attend. .

•

·i
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HaR Block

The Public Utilities Commission ot Ohio has set
lor publil: hearing Case
No . 81-2-EL-EFC . to
review the fuel procure. ment practices and policies at The Ohio Power
Company, the operation
or its Electric Fuel Component Clause, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled · Ia begin at
1 :OO p m. on Monday ,
March 23. 1981, at the
City Council Chambers ,
218 Cleveland Ave . , S.W.,
Canton, Ohio 44702 .
An interested parties will
be given an opportunity
1o be heard . Further intormation may be obtained
by contactmg the Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : oav1d M. Poll&lt;,
Secretary

.:; Cn«:t.

From

c

....:==~=-:.:.:.=--,---------------:==

MASON FURNITURE

'·

..-

-

To MEETTONlGirr

SA'nJRDAY
American Legion Post 140, New
Haven, will have illlamual birthday
dinner at 6:30 p.m. on Feb. 211 at the
Legion Home on Mill St. AU legionnaires, their wives, and Awdliary
members are invited for the dinner.
Reservations are to be made by
Calling 8112-3101. A dance wW follow
the dinner with music by the Blue
Notes,9p.m. tola.m.

i.

... i

members attendinil- -

• BIR'niDAYDINNER

LEGAL NOTICE

'MASON FURNITURE

To

· l~

...,...

rues md IIIII card'ully reviewed your return prior
The Adult Fellowship Class of the
10 lhe audll lnlcnico!l- It's someone who will (10
Syracuse First Church rL the
With you at no addlllonal COlt, nul' • a lcpl .
Nazarene held a Bowling Party on
rcprcscntatiYe, bul 10 answer all QUCIIIons aboul
Friday, February 20, at the
how your raxa were piC$81'£&lt;1
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes.
Attending were church pastor,
WFU. MNCE THE TAX LAWS WOIIK fOR lOU
' .'
James B. Kittle and his wife, Nada,
~.,.
2nd
&amp;
Brown
St.
Mr. and Mrs. Shennan Cundiff, Pam
81
618 E. Main St.
I
~ Mason,w.va.
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Butch Anns
'
Pomeroy, Oh.
9128
773
and Randy, Jenny Lou Davis, BrenTHE lt~COME TAX PEOPLE
Ph.
"
Ph. 992-3795
da Davis, J. L. Jeffers, Beverly
'
Dowell, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ryan,
Mae Grueser, Kevin and Scott, Mr.
Open 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Weekdays
and Mrs. Leonard Bass, Mr. and
9-S Saturday
Mrs. Ralph Lavender, Beckie and
Appointments Availa!lle
;, Doug, Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pl!:!kens
~
and Eber, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Wjlliarn 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __L_:__ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - P. Rizer and Kristy, Barbara 1"
Bearhs and Mark, Wally Haines,
and Vicki Rizer.

TO OBSERVE
Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles Bartelt, Sr.,
MASON - A potluck dinner and and Amy, Mrs. Lois Test, Danny and
fellowship program to welcome the Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bwngard- Rutland, will observe their 40th wednew pastor and his family to tl\e ner, Rod, Jeff, Tom and Emily, Mr. ding anniversary with an open house
Mason United Methodist Church was and Mrs. Le~ter Zerkle, Mrs. Cla~a Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m. The observance
Roush, Chnsty Wilcock, Robbie • is being hosted by the couple's
held Sunday.
The Rev. and Mrs. Bennie Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles children. Friends and relatives are
Stevens, daughter Angie and son Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. Marty invited to call during the open house
hours.
Kent began their ministry here two Yeager, Craig and Erin.
weeks ago. Attending the dinner . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kitchen
and Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Burton
Hickman, Valorie and Sherry, Mr.
SHOP
and Mrs. James Proffitt and Angie,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Proffitt and Nancy, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Redman,
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA
Lorie and Ray, Mrs. Ruth Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Walker, Mr.
and Mrs. David Smith and Sarah
Marie, Mrs. Donna Fowler and
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Noble,
8:30 to 5:00, -.:hursday till12 noon
~ ' .
1
Jeff and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Ross, Shawn and Amy, Jack Fowler
and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith,
773-5592
HERMAN GRATE
Mason, W ;va.
' '
Mrs. Maxine Arnold, Mrs. Frances
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs, Gary t-:.------------------------l
Stewart, Crystal, Missy and Tiffiney, Mrs. Lisa Crump and Nikki,
Mrs. Lucille Swackhammer, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Swackhammer

f. .·.· ..

at the church. A wu.on prayer
cJO&amp;ed the meetini· Mrs. Kenneth
Harris and Mrs. Jewell served a
vaientlne del8ert course til the ·14

Stewart reported on the Health Care
Center patient remembered by the
circle.
Plans were completed for the Len·
ten breakfast to be held on March 4

Two views of life was the program

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Wllh Exchange

'43

011 Reg. &amp;6.88

41 molllll Auto tan.ry

Top and side terminal s!yles
Save.

tor many cars. trucks.

$18

Sale Price
M.D. ,.,...., lllltallecl
Double wrapped, zinc
ceoled. Many U.S. cars. light

tnJcks.

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which may be needed
018 at exira cost.

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185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GAL.UPOLIS
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world'a greateat butler are highllQhted on tonight's program . (80
mine.)
C1J NOVA 'The Melody of Hoallh
Care' In an era afmadlcal mlraclaa,
a shockingly large segment of the
population Ia unable to afford
health care. NOVA comparee hoW
the eocietlee of Great Britain and
the U.S. have organized health
care delivery tor their people, and
how thaae ayatema arellnanced.
(CioaoO·Captionod: U.S.A.) (80
mint.)
®FAST FORWARD
8:30 Cll GOOD NEWS

l WAS THIN KIN' MORE
ABOUT MY WHOLE
HIDE!

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WHAT DO VOU
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TUI!SDAY MOVIE OP
THE WI!EK 'Throe On ADale' 1878
Star a: Rick Nalaon, Lon I Ander eon .

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TOMOIIIIOW COA81'
TC&gt;COASTGoelta:ThaO.kRidue
Boya, Chuck Norrla. (GO mlna.)

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South

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When your partner leads a
suit against no trump and you
can see that continuin~ with
that suit is the wtnning
defense, you may be force4 at
times, to make an unusual
play to do so.
South passed a marginal
band, but open or not, three no

trump is the most likely final
contract.
East put up the · king of
clubs at trick one and it was
allowed to hold. SOOth won the
club C&lt;lntinua\ion, crossed lo
dummy with a spade and led a
low diamond.
The ball was now in East's
court. East with one remain-·
ing club, simply has to ho.J&gt;"
his partner has the ace of diamonds in order to establish
the clu)s and then use them.
In other words, East has to
preserve West's entry until
after the clubs have been
established.
·If Ea~, rises wllb the dia·
mond king, South has no
chance. East clears the clubs
and when both the hearts fail ,
to break, and the queen of
spades does not drop under
the ace-king, Soulb must
concede a two trick set.
Follow the play if East
plays low and West wins the
first diamond. The clubs can
no longer be used. And, if both
East and West duck the
diamond, South can revert to
hearts in order to make nine
tricks.
When declarer bas to knock
out two cards at no trump, it
is important that the. ~layer
who is shorter in the swt that
the defenders are establishing
has his entry knocked outfirst. Second hand high is
sometimes the answer.
(NEWSPAPER ENT~RPRISE ASSN .)

t!l
llafdl 'fJ • "
11, THOMAS JOSEPH
Z Euy-movinl
I Fonner Yankee

ACROII!I
1 David II one
5 Lynn of tbe
lAte show
I John oftbe
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11 Onward
1Z Overtu
IS Awakened

sluger
t()ppoalte
c:l.''petst"

5lnferUle .
I Medicinal
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1 Debilcle
15 Anne Jack· 1 lntlmate
1011'1 mate J1 Convivial
11 Eye part It .. _Boy"

Yetterday'a Aaner.
!3 Son of Jacob
zt Real estate

3! Une up for ·
thla
dance
II Bird lalk

contractl

17 Dwell
(Irisb air J !S Leaving a
II Cacophony 11 Cuch river valid will

zz American

Ulmmute
ZIOneoftbe

IS Compoeer
Khachaturian
• HMd (Fr.)

• "'Bounce"

1t Major
(Millie)

ZlHelloe
!Z Sans fat

stage star

!II Gennati

aoncs

•

11 Out of tbe wsy

EgypUsn

deity

Three
Stooges

Z'l One Into
futures
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county
Zl Suffen from
II Whole
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1'1 Pig
II Nurtured
II Proft,

.. Pronourtee

USha.,aeu

u Wife of

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fiOofiO

DOWN
1 Provelltler

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
•

AXYDLBAA'IB
II LONQPBLLOW
One letter almply atone!. for another. In thil sample A II
used for the three L'l, X for tbe two O'a, ete. Sinale !etten,
apoalroph", the leni\h and formotlon of the wor&lt;Ja on all
hinla. Jt.eh day the eode lttltn are dllerent.
CRYPI'OQUOTIIII

GQ

PRNNZ

PRNW

GQ

GQ

FOW "WH

L DG U

R

TWJ

OF

HRPS

QY

ZQEN
TRPS.- URODTENGQY
YMt.nlay'l CrJ#It~te: THE BEST WAY . TO TURN A
WOMAN'S HEAD IS TELL HER SHE HAS A BI!:AI.TriFUL
PROFILE.--SACHA GUITRY

•
I

3t

By Oswald Jacoby
and Aloo Soatag

()) (ft) •
AIC NI!WS
NIGHTLINI!
G (I) CBS LATI! IIOVII! 'LOU
GRANT: Slnglu' Stor1: Ed A-r •
Robart Walden. A nawapaper ••·
J)ert ia hired to give the Trlb a HW
look . The reault ·-thl Trlb ' l beat
report era are aant out on 1 atory
about aa•, alnglaa, and computer
doling. (Repeat) 'THE PRISONER
OF SECOND AVENUE' t976Storl:
Jack Lammon, Anna Bancroft . ...,
Edlaon flnda hie workl tamno apan
attar heloH8 hie job. (Repeat)
(I) AIC CAPTIONED N!WB
®lMOYII-(WI!STERN)00 . . . . . . .
Fe" 1N1
12:00 CJ) MOVII! -(ICII!NCI!•FICTION) •

Cl)

WHI

Opening lead:•J

CD

11

• Q 10 3 2
.J9 84
tK 2
tKU

t7 6
'10 2

m•m

11

. EAST

WEST

Laverne and Shirl&amp;)' are propoMd
to by a pair of rock mualclana whO
want to marry them aotheycan etay
in America.
® PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
8:88 Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 CJl. CD TUESDAY NIGNT AT
THE MOVIES 'Evllo Peron' I 881
Stafl : Faye Ouneway, Jamaa Fer·
entino.
C1J 700CLUB
C!l MOYIE ·(MUSICAL) ••••
"Gra..." 1878
.
(1)(12)11 THIIEE'SCoMPANY
D (I) (!D) CBS TUESDAY lltGHT
MOYIE 'Fallen "noel' 1981 Stare:
Melinda 0111on, Dana HilL
(l)(ll) IIYSTERYI 'RumpOteoltheBalley: The Caaa of Identity' Rumpole takes on the caaa ot Oava An·
eta)', who atanda aocuaad ol attacking the manager of a liquor
etore. (Ctoaed·Captlonad; U.S." .)
8:30 (l)(ft)e TOOCLOSEFDRCOMFOFIT Jackie Ia torn between her
plranta and moving away from
home when shale offered a great
job in New Yori&lt; City.
8:46 (I) TIIS EYI!NtNG NEWS
HART TO HART The
10:00 (I) (ft) •
eyndlca ta contamlnataa a river running near the Har1 Ranch and
blamealt on a chemical plant; by
poiaonlno the water and kllllnocattle. the mob hopea to force the
ranchera to aall their land, which
then will be etrip mined. (80 mina.)
Cil SOUNDSTAGe 'An Evening
With
VIctor
Borge'
(Ciooed·Ceptloned)
®NEWS
t0:28 CIJ CBN UPDATE N!WS
t0:30 C1J FAITH 20
® TWILIGHT ZONI
t0:118 CIJ CBN UPDATE NI!WS
m
a m illl (ft) •
NI!WS
Cll TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHICT
CIJ STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Krll
Krlatolleraon and Anna Murray'
Two of America' aho"aat atara perform a medley or their blggeat
hita.
Cll NIGHT GALLERY
(I) MORECAMBE AIID WISI!
11:21 CIJ CBNUPDATENI!WS
THE TONIGHT lltOW
11:30
Guest: Catherine Daneuvl. (80
mlna.)
Cll ROSS BAOL!Y SHOW
Cll.
MOVII!
·(ROMANCI!·MUSiCAL) 00 1'1

....

nHI

tAK4
'KQ76S
• Q984

GDffibltLAVEIINEAND~Y

'·
'

tomorrow)

YeBierday'sl Jumblos : FLUKE HOBBY VASSAL DINGHY
·
Answer : Whatever the mode of travel, they alwi~S go
on foot - SHOES

bla Arcola apartment.
D(I)(!D) THAT'S MY UNE Amon

IT'S GONN.._ BAlL ME
OUT, lDO! r'M TAKIN'
A BUNCH OF 'EM
BACK 10 TH1 FOLKS
IN MOO!

D "0-(I I)"
~Answers

CllGCD

... \TCOULD 6E HE JUST

NO ... HONE C1'

I

~

Now arrange thB circled letters to ·
form the surprtu answer, as suggesled by ltle above canoon.

Prln1111swer here:

Hawka ve New Yoric. Knloka
(l)e(l) JOKI!R'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOOBOUAIIEI
(l)(ll) DICKCAVETTBNOW
(!D) MATCH GAME
(ft). FACE THI! MUSIC
7:58 (J) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
LOBO lt'o onQthertyplcal
day In the Atlanta pollee atetion
when Lobo lnveatlgataa a mad
bomber whoae caretully planned
bl..ta rip apart unlikely c;tty tar·
geta, and a mother; frantically
aearchingforharmlulngchlld,kid·
napa Carson. (60 mlna.)
C1J ORAL ROBI!IITS
(I) (ft) . . HAPPY DAYS Ao hlo
romance with Jeanie naare the
rocks , Chachi laarna 'a laaaon In
family pride when Fonzte llna~laa
aninvltatlonfortheCunnlnghamato
a spicy spaghetti dinner etthehum·

l "' t&gt;lt

...

IOPTECKI
[J I

®
MACNEIL-l.EHREII
REPORT
®!NEWS
7:30
BULLSEYE
CIJ FAITHTHATLIVES
C!J WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
'1981 Caeear'a Palace Invitation·
at' An elite competition featuring
America' a top tamale gymn~~ata.
(]) NBA BASKETBALL Atlonta

'

l~i~-:_~;;;-~~

IKf~cr· t)

CIJ

Z.- 24-

I

[J I )

a (I) TICTACDOUGH

~

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--

'Lechwe Of Kufle Flata'

'bO'V~ ifD'+J~

:J

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":::.:..~-·

am

~.

Ju-.

foor ordinary words.

memeCiltmiD•-·•
(J) BACKYARD

(I)
CAROL IIUIINI!TT AN0
FRIENDS
())ABC NEWS
()) 3-2·1 CONTACT
(ll) OVEREASY'DayCaro' Gueat:
Or. Lawrence Feigenbaum, Ali·
aoclate Chief of Medicine at Mount
Zion Hospital in San Frenclaco.
Hoat : Hugh · Oowna. (Cioaed·
Capllonad; U.S.A.)
8:30 CJl.CD NBC NEWS
(J) 2oth CENTURY GUIDI!UNI!S
C!J MOYIE 'The Naehvllle Coyote'
Story Of a mleplacea Calltorftla
coyote and hie edventurea with a
hard luck aongwrlter In country muaic'a caj:jltal city, Naahvllle, T~·
neaaee. (&amp;1 M1NS.(
CIJ BOB NI!-AIIT IIIOW
()) FACE THE MUSIC
(!D) cas NEWS
(I) WILD WilD Wor!LD OF
AN..ALB
® LIUAS, YOGA AND YOU
(ft). ABC NEWS
1:18 CIJ C:.BNUPDATI!NI!WS
7:00 ( } ) . PM MAGAZINE
· Cll
GERALD
DERSTIIII!
PRESENTS
C1J ALLIN THE FAMLY
(1)(12). FAMILY FEUD
[!) STAN HITCHCOCK IHOW

' &lt;I&gt; c
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EYEMNO

ca.

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ftmif.\.OID~ ~THATICIIAMaiDWORDCWIE
~ ~ ~~·
by Horwl AmoldJndlloOLee

�P;i e-1G-The D&lt;~il

worst of times for top-ranked
Oregon State, whose blitzkreig
defense made sure that was enough
to keep the Beavers the only major
WJbeaten college basketball team in
the nation.
Ralph Miller's powerhouse squad
made o~ly 36 percent of its shots in
the first half, then came back with a
more characteristic 73 percentin the
second to whip the Washington
Huskies 89-63 for its 23rd slraight
victory this season.
" We missed a lot of easy shots in
the first half, so we were down at
about out lowest half of the season," ·
said Beavers Coach Ralph Miller.
" But what's wrong with .545 at the
end of the game?
" It wasn't one of our better games
but the second half was close to our
best half."
In other games involving teams in
the new Associated Press Top 20,
fourth-ranked DePaul manhandled
· Butler 89-64 and No.20 Louisville,
making its first appearance in the
national rankings in nine weeks, won
its lith game in a ·row with an 81-67
decision over Cincinnati.
· For most of the season, Oregon
State has been ahead of Missouri's
NCAA team record pace of 57.2 perl!ent set in 1979-80.
· But while the Beavers struggled to
find the basket in the first half. they

*

still led 37-'n at .i ntennission
because the hoop was nearly invisible to the Huskies. They scored
on only 25 percent of their shots in
the first 20 minutes and finished the
game !!Onnecting at a 34 percent
clip.
" We couldn't shoot the ball worth
beans and I SUP!&gt;OSI' that bas
something to do with their defense,"
said Washington Coach Marv Bar·
shman. "A team like ours has to pill
the ball in the hole pretty regularly
to cause any problems. When we
stayed in there at the first of the
game, they were shooting about as
poorly as we were.
"Mter they started getting the
ball inside, they had no problems. ''
The man inside for Oregon State
was center Steve Johnson, who
scored 21 of his game-high 24 points
in the second half. He played only
four minutes in the first half because
of foul trouble, then returned after
halftime to score six·of eight straight
points by the Beavers to put them
finnly in control. ·
Washington led 1&amp;-14 midway
through the first half before the
Beavers scored 13 points in a row
over a 4\'.o minute stretch to take the
lead for good.
The DePaul and Louisville starters gave their teams huge leads
before going to the bench.
DePaul easily improved its record

to 2~1. taking a 42-.1 4lead late in the
first half against outmanned Butler
and used substitutes to coast the rest
ot' the way. JWJior guard Skip
Dillard scored all of his 18 points
before intermission to pace the Blue
Demons' scorers.
Louisville, the defending national
champion that started the season 27, improved its record to 17~ with a
solid . perfonnance against Cincinnati. The Ca!ldinals led 33-23 at
halftime and outscored Cincinnati
• t tart the
d
·00 t
21-. O s
secon pen
builda54-'nmargin .
Jerry Eaves finished with 21 poin·
ts fqr Louisville.

°·

Elsewhere ,
solidified his

Zam
Fredrick
national scoring

leadership with 43 points as South
Carolina ended its reg ul ar season

Pul!lic Netlce

Public Notice
PUBLIC HEARING
Re : Re-evaluation of AORTA Pomeroy Route.
Notice is hereby given
tha t a public hearing has
set

for

Thursday,

Marc h 19, 1981 al7 :00 p.m.
at the Meigs Counly Court
Courtroom, Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio for the pur·
pose of examining the con·
tinuance of Meigs County
as part of a five-county con-

of

this

grant

H

program

tra nsporta tion service is
prov ided by th e Appa!achia n Ohi o Regional
Transit Association IA OR·
TA )

from

Pome roy

to

Athens (round trip) lwice
da ily Monday through Fri·
day
·
At the hearing the City of
Alhens will afford the op·
portunity for interested
persons or a gene ies to be

" I don ' t know

sortium_ parti cipating heard with r espec t to the
under Section 18 of the sur- socia l, environmental and
face Transportation A ct of economi c aspects.

1918 and the Ohio Depart ·
m~ nts of Transportation
Ohio 'Mass Transportation

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Atlanta
;Braves owner Ted Turner wants to
:trade outfielder Gary Matthews to
;the Cincinnati Reds but Matthews
:wants to stay put.
· "I know they're trying to force me
lo go to Cincinnati, but I'm not run)1ing aivay. I don't want to be traded
clltil I have a new contract," said
:Ma!thews, who is in the last year of a
:COntract that will pay him $260,000.
: The revelation from Turner was
•reported in Atlanta. Reds President
:Dick Wagner, at the Reds training
:cllfl'\p in Tampa, Fla., said he had no
;comment OQ reports he was willing
•to trade Reds centerfielder Dave
:eomns to Atlanta for Matthews.
"That would be tampering,"
~Wagner said.
Turner said he gave Matthews a
choice: Play for Cincinnati or sit on
the Atlanta bench.
"Gary will not play regularly if ~e
stays with us and now that I've said
It, I've got to back it up. Our outfield
would be Dale Murphy, Cia udell
Washington and Terry Harper.
Maybe I'm making a mistake, but I
'don't think so. And If one of them
falls or goes into a slump, we can put
Gary in. He won't embarrass us..

because he's terrific," Turner said
in Atlanta.
"Look at it this way. This is good
for Gary. He wants to sign a new
contract for $700,000 a season, and
he might get it from somebody if he
plays regularly this year. So he can
go to Cincinnati and do that, but he
sits on the bench for us," Tu'rner
said.
But Wagner said he did not anticipate a deal of any significance
during spring training.
"I've tlllked to six or eight clubs In
the last 30 days about trades. We've
got two or three things working but I
don't look at any of them as
·serious,'' Wagner said.
Braves General Manger John
Mullen confinned his team has
discussed Matthews with the Reds
but said that was not unusual.
"We've talked to a lot of teams
about Matthews because he has to be
traded." Mullen refused to say
whether the Braves were Interested
In Collins because that might be considered tampering.
Reds Manager John McNamara
said he would report to the Reds
camp today. Pitchers and catchers
are scheduled to report on Thur-

sday.

"

II just doesn ' t

build confidence with me ."

Deborah Roach
Exec utive Director,
AORTA
!2J 17,24

Pub!lc Notice

consider development f11_il
Rule and associated tarlfiJ
relative to the purcnasea
and sales of electric pew~
l!elween regulated utili
companle$ and sma
power producers ai'MI
coQenerators in contorml~r:
wlfh Sections 210 and 201 Qf
the
Public
UIIIII ,V
Regulatory P_ollcles A(l Clt
1918 (PURPA). Tne public
hearing will be held com:
mencing March 161 1981 at
9:30 a .m . In the. otflces of
the Public Utllotles C9mmisslon of Ohio, 375 Soul~
Hlgh Street, Columbu~
Ohlo -43215.
.,
oJ

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO '"
with a 106-69 triumph over Georgia
TheL~~bti~ ~ft~~~~~Com· By: Dav id M . Polk,
Southern; Mike Ferrara, the No.2
mission of Ohio has Secretarv
· th
ti
ed 35 · ts
schedured a hearing in
scorertn ena on,scor
potn ~----------.l.-----------1 Case No. 80·836·EL·UNC to (2) 24, lie
"
to lead Colgate to a 7!Hi6 decision
~=::...:.::.::.:..:_..:_.::...:._:_...:_.:_j______..;__ __.

over Army; Villanova outlasted

connecticut7~73indoubleovertime

behind John Pinone's 23 points ;
GraylinWarnerscored23pointsand
Kevin Figaro added 22 as Southwestern Louisiana upset Lamar,
then ranked 19th, 97-81; Tulsa improved its record to 18-6 with a 63-47
victory over Indiana State; and Den·
nis Isbell scored 23 points to help
Memphis State to a 75-07 victory
over Penn State.

i0-836-EL·UNC

· · - - - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - - - - - - - 1

1
1
1

Curb Inflation. 'I .,..,-#llllfJ.w__..__
Pay Cash for ·
CIass ifi e ds a nd
WANT AD INFORMAnON
S'llTIS~Y

Savell I

and defending national champion
Louisville.
Louisville, which has been absent
from the national rankings for nine
weeks but now has won II games in a
row, and Arkansas, missing from
the Top 20 for eight weeks, returned
to the list. Both Michigan, a member
of the poll the last 10 weeks, and
Lamar, which joined the Top 20 last
week, dropped out of the rankings
after being upset last week .

Smythe Division

St. Loois

36 13
26 26
21 23
19 :ll
17 11

Olic~o

Van('(luver

Edmtlnton
Colorado
Winnipeg

12: Z70
1'0 24)
J7 223 '
\0 134

210
248
226
248
262

I

84
62
59
48
,..

10 201
7 43 II 190 292 25
W•lrt Conf@rf'D('("

l4 HI

~An~eles

3220 9~22873
21 30 9 22J 265 51
IS 30 12 191 244 48
16 29 Ui 2.11 289 48
Adams Olvlliou
Z9 12 19 239 l8l 77
29 t9 14 zzr t96 n
27 23 10 237 217 64
21 2fl 13 235 'JJJ7 55
Z2 29 10 243 281 54
Mondly's Game

Pittsburgh
DPtroit
Hartfortl
Buffalo

Minnesota
&amp;stoo
Quebe&lt;

Toronto

New York Islanders 4, Minnesota 1
hesday'sG•mes

,,
,

These cas h rates
include di scount

2. _ _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ __

8 . _ _ _ _ __

Philadelphia at VanCtluver

WedDeld.ly's G•mes

41-l!qy i,.nent lor lllent

9- Wanted to 8\LY

•MERCHANDISE

1

I
n.
I
13. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I
14. _ __ _ _ _ _ I
15.
I
26. _ _ __ _ _
27 . _ _ _ _ _ __
28 ._ _ _ _ _ __
19._ _ _ _ _ __
30._ _ _ _ _ __
31 . _ _ _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ _ __

BoStoo at QUebec
at Toronto
Washin!(\on at OUcago

•
"

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK

•

n - Wal'ltHIO.&amp;IY
n - nvdtltorSa ..
u- u~"*lt

OpportuniTy
'U- Monty to lwn
ll- ProtesUon&amp;l

t4-H•y &amp; Or•ln
u - s..e &amp; lll'ertituer

S.r'tiUI

•TRANSPORTATION

J I - AII~

• REAL ESTATE

tor S•te

n- v•ns&amp;•w .D.

11 - Hom" tor S•lel

Jt-Mot•unlll
,.A.ute,•m
• o\(tltiOf'ill
11- o\ulo •INi r

lJ - Mo~le+tomes

Jt-

tor hit
U - FarmiiOr Salt
Jf- lvsintn luildintt
n-- lo~s &amp; o\crt•t•
Jl-Real Ett•tt W•ntlfCI
11- - .. ttott

1

SJ-Antlqllet
54- Misc . MercNIHilst
SI--1\IIMIInt S\1'-''-•
st-lllettlor Sale

11 _,- .,m lquiiN'I"''

IWsintu

•SERVICES

Wani·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
l : lO P .M . DillY
12 Noon Saturd.v

tor MonGI'f

11- P1111111tln1 &amp;

aauwatlftl

n-•,untlrll

M-llectrlcal
A ltfrl,.ration

U-Otntr•l H•ullnl
11-M.H . • .,.lr

t7 - U,fl0tlterv

Rates and Other Inform at! on

34. _ _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ _ __

IS Wordt or Un.. r
I d•f

Col ort~d o

,....

1.00
1.10

........

tctan

New York Islanders at Calgary
Philadelphia at Edmonton

ldayf

15.- - - - - - 16 . - - - - - " - - - -

•ct•n

CMr" 1

tu··
I.M ~

1.U ..

Ul

l•cl'l werd ower tht mlnlmvm IJ wort1111 • nnfl .., wenl '"ell';'. ~
Alii r ~o~nnlnt ottler lhen contKutivt el•n w1 11• cMr . . . •• , . , Uy

,.,..

Ohio Hl1b SebooiBoys Basketball

RnW&amp;s
Clul AAA Toournalllfllt.s
Cin. Colerain 47, Fairfield 45
Cin. Purcell ~. Amelia 43
Cin. Sycamore &amp;4. Lemon-Monroe 48
Cin. Walnut Hilb 59, Cin . Glen Este 37
c.... AA Tuu.rnarmoll
Harrisoo St. Cln. Deer Park 38

'

li-Hemtlm1H'O¥ementl

33. _ _ _ _ _ __

at Hartford

Buffalo at New York. Rangers .
Winnipeg at Pittsburgh
St.I.A&gt;uls at Detroit

S1 - M~tUttftold OoMI

• FINANCIAL
21 -

"

n-cl, Tv. Aadlo Eq~o~l''"'"'

14- lysln"l TrainJnt
IS-Scttooll Instruction
,._
lhdlo, TV
&amp; Cl Atp.ll ,:
11- W•nttd To Do

I
I
I
I

"

1- Pwbolic Slit
&amp; Auclion

13- lf'lsuranu

11. _ _ _ __
1. _ _ _ _ _ __

4t-fttoom•
..-SINU tor ttent
•tJ- WantM to JIIHit

n - Situllecl \IUntH

1
19.
I
10. _ _ _ _ _ 1:

Montreal at St.Louis
·
Edmontoo at Los Angele.!!'
Minneslltl

0

42- Moblle Hemet
ltr lhnt
•-AHrtmut few "ent

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
ti - HI!lp w1 nttd

17. _ _ _ _ _ _
18. _ __ _ _ _

8 259 177 76

eRENTALS
41 - "ou• .. lor lll:.nt

J- Announnmtnll
4- Givt•wn
s - H•~Pr Ads
1- Lo•t end fl"ound
r - Yerd S.te

Print one word in each
space below . Each initial or group of figures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or·
phone number if used.
You ' ll get better results
if you descr ibe full y,
give price . The Sentinel
reserves the righ t to
classify , edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
clasification if you ' ll
check the proper box
below
Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent

eANNOI,INCEMENTS

MODIIIy't

Mail This Coupon With Remittance
The Daily Sentinel

In memory, C•rd 01 1 n•nlt" end Otlltvarv 1 ' un11 ~,. ..,., ll.ll ;
m inlmvm . C•ltlln •Ciunn.
MMile Hame . . let J~IWII Y.1 rd Ill .. lrl •tctplft on I~ Wltlt Clift •lffl ·
order. 21 c:ent cflar. . tor ••• urry!llt Ia• NumN• '" C•rt tf TfWI
S.ntlnel.

N. College Hill 68. Wyurnill1! 66
We:stem Bruwn 72, New Richmond 53
CLan A Tou11111rmnU1 .
Arulonia 39. Bradfurd 3S

CuvinKton 80, Yell ow Springs 49
Franklln-Munrot! ~ . Twm Valley N. 61
Franklin Fumace Green 70, Ironton St.

J ~.~&amp;e ph

64

HaiUlln Trace 51 , Symmes Valley 46
Patriot Southwe:!llern 54, North Gallia ~
Radne Southern II , Kyger Creek 50
Tri·Village 67, N•wtun ss;·

The
Perfect
Pair
Matching diamond
ring &amp; pendant

SALE

Pend en

Ring
1

79

Special

Give her our diamond ring
or pendant. Or give he!
bOIIt. What- you give.
tills diamond shape diamond loci&lt; Is lo be loved
lnr-. ln 14 kt. oold.

more about
Homeowner Loans
than City Loan.

&amp;_

Ingels Furn.
&amp; Jewelry
Middleport

q~ 1:. Main

St. • 992·2171

-- .1·--CCimlll.--

Gl
LlNDlR

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

by Larry Wright

54

Wf\A\S
lflt R?t~l

Business Services
lt...-,...,...--........---.,--

,.-..,...,.::-::,...,

wo r ld Book Encyclopedias
Lim ited nuf'Tlber, 1980
ediiton sets. Save $100.00.
$15 .00 per month . Eli zabeth
Coffman ~ 9-49-2592 .

~ ~lf'.IIKtt

OLD COINS, pocket wal·
c hes, class r ings, wedding
band s, diamonds. Gold or
s liver . Call J . A. Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Athens, OH . 59~ · 4221 .

Misc. Merchanise

SP€CtAL DISCOUNT
prices o n furnitur e.
Reupholstering. Jan. ' &amp;
F e b ., 1981. Mowrey ' s
Upholstery,
Pt. Pl .easant,
W.Va
. 1·304·675·4154

r

INSULAnON
vinyl&amp;·

10 lb. Chocolate

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING.
. SUPPLIES
Reedsville, OH .
Ph . 667 ·6485

Baby clothes , boy ' s
clothes, between s ize 10 &amp;
14, women 1 s clothes size 10
&amp; 12. Sorne man's clothing,
sheer curtains, &amp; many
new ·d rapes. All sizes. Sa le
trom 23·27. 992·5917, 298
Mulberry Ave. Close to a p·
ts .

Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anyth ing
slamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K
gold. Si lver coins, pocket
wat ches .. Call Joe, Clark at
991·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy , Ohio ~5769

10% to20%. Dlscoiint
On Entire Stock
1·25·1 mo.

Aluminum Siding
1 Insulation
t s·torm Doors
· 1 Storm Windows
1 Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
1·28·1

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and guller
work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

V.C. YOUNG II

992-62U or 992-7314
Pomeroy , Oh.

ARD .·
AVA TORS

Pets for Sale

56

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

WIN

SEASONED FIREWOOD
'for sale. $30.00. Phone 992·
5240.

Announcements
PAY highes t prices
l)'ossible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
t,Ontact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

RA CINE GUN SHOOT,
Rac ine Gun Club, every
Friday night . start ing at
'7":30 p.m . Factory chok e

Fre!! Estimates

~n so nly .

--

KEN SOLES

~:·_

PIANO . Too
to neglect, expert
and repair. Lane
742·2951 or 992

. 245-9113

LADY or girl to live in. 992 ·
2686.

DO YOU have banking or
f inancial
institution
Racine Volunteer Fire background but would like
Departm ent sponsors a to be outside? We need out·
shot gun &amp; rif le mat ch si de contac t person . Must
ever y Sat. night 6:30 p.m. be reside nl of area with
at the ir building in Bashan. outgoing
personality .
Fac tory c hok e 12 guage Retire ment , med ical, den ·
shot guns only . Open sights tal a ll paid, salary open .
22 r ifl e.
Send resume to Box. 129M,
co The Daily Sentinel,
-~-MEIGS MU SE UM Open by Court Street, Pom eory ,
appointment Jan uary·Mar Oh;o45769 .
ch. 992·2164, 992·2802, 992
1360 or 992 2639 . Histori es APPLICATIONS tor future
to r sale
Pomeroy
CETA training positions
Midd le port Libra ri es .
are bei ng accepted at the
Gallia Me igs Community
Put a cold nose in your life. Action Agency . Residents
Ca ll the Meigs County of Gallia and Meigs coun·
Huma ne Society at 992 lie s may obtain furthe r intormation at the Meigs of6260.
fice in Pomeroy, 117 W. 2nd
building) 992·
NOW DOl NG hauling , St., ;(Warner
the Gallipolis office.
moving jobs , pa int ing 2313
(O ld Tha le r Ford building }
houses inside or o.ut. 446 4612, extensions 63 or
Basement, a tti c clean ing , 67 ; or the Cheshire offi ce,
also carpet c lean i n~ard 367 73•7 or 991-6629 . When
work , etc . Phone 992 38-49 . ca lling , ask for the CETA
Ask for Vel ma and leave intake off ice. Equal Op·
. na me a nd number and we po rtunity E mpl oye r .
Will re turn the ca ll. Free
estima tes in Meiqs County
~ 1ll~ . IJU to S500 weekly doing
ar ea .
ma ilin g work . No f)( ·
perience requ ired . AP·
· LOCKS MITH
Service ,
LY : Circle Sales, P .O.
Master Keying , · Co m P
22 4 o , Richmond Hill,
· binations, Bonded . Call: Box
NY 11.418
New Haven, w . va . (304 )
882 2019 .
.
AUrac tive part time work
fo r
we ll
groomed
INCOME TAX se rvice. home makers who love
Fede ral and sta te . Wallace pr ett y fa ~ hi o n s and want to
Russe ll, Bradbury . Phone keep up on current styles.
991 7278 .
Ave rage S 10.00 pe r hou r
plus tree wa rdro be fo r
. VEGETABLE PL A NT ~ fho~e who quality .
· Tomatoes, swee t potatoes, Manageme nt opportunity
s traw berr y. peppers , cab open. For free infomat ion
, bage , ca ulif lower , broccoli, please phone 992 3941 or
• celery, head lc 1tucc, egg 669 4535.
plant, cucumbers, melons,
squas n. For varieties, CA LL in d ietary helper &amp;
pr ices. a nd orderi ng, call d ishwas her. Ca ll Pa m Me
Har ris
Farms and Claugh lin 9 5. M F. 991
: Gree, houses , Portl a nd . 6606.
· Ohio a1843 1698 or 843·2693 .
· T H E ELI TE 5 ,000 :
' Swi ng ing socia ·l c lub ,
cou pl es,
. si ng les and
disc reet, lim ited mem
bership, dating servi ce,
' cocktail part ies, and on
premised swing clu b. For
· more informa tion. writ e
' P.O. Box 4789 , Fairview
Pa rk, Ohio 441 26 .
APP LES : golde n delicious,
SJ .7S per bushe l. Other
va rieties at S4 .00 pe r bushel
, and up . Fitzpatrick Or
· chard, St. Rt . 689 . Phone
' 669 3185.

Tired of penny pinching ??
House wives a nd mothers ,
change spare t ime intossss
Flexible hours, e)(ce llent
ear nings, free wardrobe .
Two evenings a week . For
more lnlorma' tion call 992 ·
3941 or 669 &lt;535
Giveaway
4
Smal l peekapoo. mal e .
Loves kids . 992· 7876.
One large puppy . Five
months old. Very fr iendly .
843·3111.
9

USED FURNITURE . Gold

"..'
•

,,
'

,,
"

'

·watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper brass and
batteries, a ntique items ,
also do a ppra i.sals, co m·
plete auCtionee r service .
Over 30 years experience in
business. V'.' ill buy com·
plete estates . Osby Martin
Gene ral Store, Midd leport ,
0 ~ . 992 ·6310 .
' CHIP WOOD Pol es ma x.
diameter 14" on ldrgest
end. $12 .50 per lon. Bundled
s lab . · $10 .50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co ., Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy 991 2689.
WOMAN 'S diamond ring .
992 5786.

0

1"

,

r

1975 VI KING Mobi le Hom e,
12x65 in exce lle nt con·
dition, underpinn ing in
eluded. $5500.00. 241 ·3942 .
-~----

Real Estate

I RON AND BRAS S BED S
Old furniture , desks, gold
r ings, jeWe lry , Silver
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
Ice boxes, jars, antiques ,
etc. complete households .
Write : M.D. Miller , Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45169 . Or
ca ll992·1760.

-·-

General

Housing
Headquarters

T~~~L~-~:.1 ,~i

12
HAVE VACANCY lor
elderly persons who need
boa rd. roo m and laundry .
Eat in dini ng room, men
and wo men have separate
baths, private rooms and
semi private , avai lab le .
Prices to tit income . 992
6022.

TREE TRIMMIN G and
remova l. 9.49 2129 or 992 ·
6040.

REMODEL ING
work .
Walls, ce ilings, floors ,
doors/!. si d ing . 991 2759.
Work in daytime helping
elde rly people. Rutland·
Pomeroy Midd leport a rea.
742 2288 .
Insurance
13
IN
A U TO MOBILE
S U RANCE been ca nyour
c e lled ?
Lost
operator 's license? Phone
992 2143 .
Wanted lo Do
18
Furnace repairs, electrical
work, plumbing . mobile
home or residence . 992 ·
5858.
Will do pa nelin g, cei ling ,
floor t ile , plumbing. Free
estimates. Fred Miller at
992-6338.

Wanted to B_'!Y.,_

&amp; si lver, c lass r ings. pocket

CITY
COMPANY

Candy's Classi'c
Collections

'"

Ma tern ity Clo thes Nursi ng
bras c hildren' s c lott'lcs 1 2
pri ce. NE W: girl' s 7 to 14
tops a nd pa nts ; 25 percen t
ott . Maveri ck shorts and
pant s sets sizes 2 7; 25 per
cent off . Wat ermelon Pat
ch, Ne w·Have n. 882 3410 .

Nobody knows

We don't have to tell you about
the high cost of living these days. But
prices aren't all that's going up. 1k
value of your ljouse is, too. In ~, it's
worth far more today than ever before.
N. City Loan, we can 1help you
tum that increasing value into the
money you need to meet major
wants or needs. Like a college
,, education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to make a ~ial
dream come true. With a
HomeQWiler Loan of up to
$50,000 or more.
When it comes to solving a big
money problem, Ohio people
know where to IUm. To City Loan. Because nobody
1 r\.A J\._l
knows you- and your needs- like we do.
J..\.1'\1 -~

words are inadequate to
express our deep ap·
preciation to our many
neighbors and friends for
the lovely flowers, cards
:Jnd toed al the death ot our
beloved Mother and Grand·
rnother, Mrs. Mabel van·
Meter. Our special thanks
the Rev. Ri chard Thomas
-~nd
Rev . Cart Hic ks,
olzer Medica l Center,
,omerov Health Care Cen·
r. Chesler Council 323
,ipaughters of America, and
:the Ewing Funeral Home
tor all the k indnesses
khown us.
Sincerely, The Mabel van·
1',1\eler F am;iy .

9
Wanted to Buy
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SIL.VER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, Rl NGS ,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
MARKET
SO LUTE
PRICE GUA RANTED. ED
BURKET T
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT .
OHI0992·3416 .

~82 .

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept. ·:.
111 Court 51., Pomerov, 0., 45769

1- CerdoiThanks
l - In Memon•m

Card of Thank's

ilouR
valuable
tuning &amp;
Dani els,

PHONE 992-2156

WriTe your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel you r ad by phone w11e n you get
results. Money not refundable.

Norrll DllliliOD

Mootrea l

YOVR NEEO&gt;

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I . For the record. ..

Wagner denies
!Matthews .trade

The Dai

Public Notice

LAFF- A- DAY

Grant Program . As a pari

NOTICE

been

.

)Oregon State regains first place
By Associated Press
Wake Forest, upset by Clemson
, Oregon State regained the top and then No.20 Maryland last week,
;position in The Associated Press fell from fifth to 12th. UCLA, sur-college basketball poll today as prised by Stanford last Saturday
Virginia, No.I _last week but the plunged from No.6 to 13. Tennessee,
latest in a long line of teams· to have a one-pOint loser to LSU last Satura major winning streak snapped by day, slipped from seventh to No.lO
:Notre Dame, slipped to No.3 behind with 715 points.
J-unnerup Louisiana State.
North Carolina headed the Second
: Oregon State, 23-&lt;l and the only
10, followed by Wake Forest, UCLA,
major unbeaten college team,
Illinois, Brigham Young, Indiana,
collected 54 of 60 first-place votes
Maryland, Arkansas, Wichita State
and 1,193 of a possible 1,200 points in
~he nationwide ballqting by a panel
of sports writers and broadcasters.
The Beavers, No.2 last week, were
replaced in the No.I slot by Virginia
N•Uoaa l S.sll:etbaU Assodatloo
three weeks ago after holding-the top
Eas~ru Coalereace
A.tlaatle D1vlai011
spot alone for two weeks and sharing
W L
Pet. GB
it with the Cavaliers another week.
PhHadelphia
52 13
.,l lll
Bust
on
49
15
LSU, which now holds the nation's
.766
2~
Ne wYork
.62$ II 1.1
"' 21
longest major winning streak at 25,
Washington
.162 22
"'
3S
New Jersey
2lJ 15
jumped two notches in taking over
.301 32
Ceatnl Olvlsloa
the No.2 position. The Tigers, 26-1,
Milwallk:ee
16 18
.719 ~
Indiana
.:1;4 10'&gt;
garnered four first-place votes and
"
29
Chi&lt;' ago
32
II
.11$ IS
1,087 points in edging both Virginia
Cleveland
.3'91 !I
"21 39
39
Allanta
and DePaul, which dropped a notch
.381 21 11
Detroit
15 32
.221
32'&gt;
to fourth .
Wes~ru Coaferell('t
Mldwell
Dlvilloa
Virginia, which saw its 28-game
San Antonio
. 42 2t
.636
winning streak shattered by Notre
Kansas City
32· II
.11$ 10
Houston
JJ
•
33
·
Dame, 57-56, last Sunday, was tah.Ill 10
Denver
.397 IS'&gt;
"
38
bed No.I by one voter and picked up . Utah
24
12
.!61 II
Dalias
9 56
1,079 points. DePaul, which raised
.Ill 32
Pacific Dlvlsloo
its record to 24-1 with an 89-64 vicPhoenix
t9 19
.721
ins Angeles
·-'tory over Butler Monday night, was
42 21
.661
~~
Portland
. 3.1 32
.S(MJ
II'&gt;
• 'five points farther back and had the Golden State
32 32
.100 tS
San Diego
: final first-place vote.
.Ill 1811
28
"
Seattle
28 36
.438 19
' Arizona State, which was No.7 a
Moad.ly's Gai~m
Houston
106,
Utah
102
: week ago, claimed the No.5 position
Tltetday'• C.. me.
1this week with 856 points - 25 more
Ne w York at AUanta
SeatUe
at
Dallas
i than Notre Dame, which leaped five
Golden State at San Antonio
: places following its upset of
!A Mgeles at Chicago
New Jersey at Denver
' Virginia.
San Die~o at Portland
· Utah, ranked ninth last week,
W~y 's C..mn
Oeveland at Boston
:. edged both Iowa and Kentucky for
New York at Washington
: the No.7 slot with 739 points. The
Los Angeles at Milwaukee
Indiana
at Houston
: Hawkeyes, who defeated Big · Ten
New Jersey at Utah
rivals Indiana and1 Purdue last
Philadelphia at San Diego
: week, had 725 points for eighth, 10
N•lloul Hoc:ll:f::y l.npc
: more than the Wildcats, who posted
C.mpbeU Coafereact
• victories over Florida and VanP•bick DtvlliM
WLTGFGAI'to
: derbilt last week.
36 16 10 m 20ii 112
N.Y. !:slanders
' Wake Forest, UCLA and Ten- Philadelphia
II 17 10 210 1&amp;3 71
29 21 12 210 ' 223 70
Calgary
; nessee, took the biggest falls this
23 30 i 211 2$1 56
N.Y. !'..;;.o1gers
· week.
19 28 IS 211 23'1 53
Washingtoo

Februar

Small investment, large
returD.s, Sentinel Want Ads~

Beavers post 23rd victory
,
By Associated Press
It was the best of times and the

Tues a

ort Ohio

Sentinel

Hom~ for Sale
31
Trailer lOt tor sale, ss.ooo.
Modular hom e lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm
house located on Route 7.
992 2511.

Bea utifu l thr ee be droom
ra nch br ic k home in Baum
Addition, Pom eroy , Ohio.
Gas heat , centra l air . Call
992 2511 or 1-687·6429.
3 BE DROOM, 2 bath,
modern kit che n, living
room, dining room, office,
full basement, new heat
system with ce ntral air,
unattached garage, 2
blocks tram school. 992·
3443 .

t

_

16 E. Second Street

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325
9 ACRES - Good A·
frame location with
sewer
and water
ava·ilable .' VIew of the
river. On ly $15,000.00 .
350 ACRES - Larg e
ca ttle farm nea rly all
fe n ce d .
10 room,
renovated farm house
with 1 fu ll baths , free
gas , nice carpet ing ,
modern kitchen, den,
fam ily room, garage
etc. overlooking the
Ohio River frontage.
$225.000,
OPPORTUNITY
Large 10 room home for
2 fam ili es. Obi . garage
apt. with bath, furnace .
business bldg. on State
Rt . JJ . Potential great .
Only S23,500.
NEW LISTING - 1919
mobile home 12)(65, two
bedrooms ,
bath ,
carpeting, electric heat ,
stove and ref rigera tor .
Rea dy to move into.
Just$7,500 .
10 ACRES, M.OR L - of
la nd for A·fram es or
s mall farm . Leading
Creek water. Rt. 124
frontage a nd some large
trees.
WAIT NO LONGER TO
SELL. JUST CALL
992·3325 or 992 ·3876 to
gel lhe iob ol selling
done.

Housing .
Headquarters
Real Estate- General

42

1975 Two Bedroom mobile
home . Partially furn ished
located in the Country
Mobile Home Park $150.00
per month. 247-3942 .
·
SALE or rent. Ap·
proxi mately 34 acres with
three bedroom modular
home in· Portland , Ohio
area . Nine miles from the
Ravenswood bridge . Cal l
after 5 p.m. at I 3041135272.

POMEROY,O .
992 · 2259
NEl l LISTING - Ap
prox. 8 acres of nice lay ·
ing land, partly clear ed
and
has
utilit ies
avaiiable . Close to town .
$9 ,200.
SMALL BUT NICE - A
cute Iittle 2 bedroom
home with a ni ce front
yard . ONLY $12,000 .
HUNTERS LOOK! - 56
acres of vacant ground
with lots of Wild life and
could ma ke a nice place
to live . ASKING ONLY
$13,900 .
MIDDLEPORT - Close
to shopping - leve l lot.
v, basement, front
porch, makes this 2
bedroom tl()use a rea l
slealal $16,700 .
A
LARGE
REO
BEDROOM - Is one ot
the beautiful aspects of
this -4 bedroom home,
with a large lot, equip·
ped kitchen. sewing
room , a full basement ,
and
many
more
fealur es . $28,500 .
SAVE ON HEATING Wjth this 6 room ranch
style home thai has a
wood burner . A full
basement, and 2 acres.
$29,900 .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland , Jr .
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
9'12-5692

Joan Trussell949-2660
OFFit:E 992-2259

~·

PH. 992-7119

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5.0 0 Per M on th
WeeklY Pickup

rranspartat.itm
i1___Autos lor sale1975 Olds Royale with vinyl
top , •new paint job, am·fm

12x60 , 2 bedrocm Mobile
Home. Racine area . 992 ·
5858.

1919
Me r cu ry
s4,3oo .oo . 992·2803.

..

Ap,artment
tor Rent

------

3 AND 4 RM furni shed apts . Phone 992·5434.
Unfurnished on e bedroom
.apartment for re nt . Ren·
ters assistanc e avail~ble
for se nior citizens. Contact
Viliage Manor Apartments
at 992·7787.
HALF of• a doub le . 2
bedroom compl e tely fur nished . ·Ava ilable 1st of
montll . 992·2749.
Four room apartment for
rent. 992 5908 .

Spac ~ f~r_R~nt __

44
COUNTRY MOB ILE Hom e
Pa rk , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
991-7419.
TRAILER spaces for rent .
Southern Va lley . Mobil e
Hom e Pa rk , Chesh ire , Oh .
991 3954.

S to ·10 aces of tillable
cropland for corn . 992-6356.

(4 Bags Limit Per Week)
PHONE 992 . 7802
or 992 . 7443

r~dio,tapepl aye r ,ai rcon-

d itoning, power steering,
992·21
or 992 2528
after
S. .
power17brakes.
41,000
mi les

- --· --

Granad~~t;;-;;,e

1351

GOO CWBS:

1972 Chevy Caprice . $495 .,
19 72 Ford Galaxie $395.
Both have good bodys and
run exc e llent . 741· 3010 ·

New &amp; lhedLIS.LSONS
RIPAIRt CloooloL Rtlo"I'L
"" G~ ltnll~ Chin~~:, Wtiftt Cll•nl'

Sill!

a tew nuw k l!r uH&gt;nt

Huters

ilt .,5
1 OrHy New OH StO'tt Clo5eoul.
S~tve
'150 , 00

All ot tn l' aoove 11trm' In u ·
cvll ent co ndit ion . All ;ue priced
to u 11 lmm~d,lat e tv . he u' to·

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
ur..•·n
~ · Main

St.

992·2181
Pomeroy

Mortgage Bankers
992· 7544
VA loansno money down
Federal Housing 3% on S25,ooo
S% on balance.
Conventional LoansS%
down
Callforlnfonnt~tion

992·7544

x ;

12
Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992-6263
Anyt'1me
2·1-1

ma~

·

water·Sewer-Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Ll·ne Hook ·ups
Septic Tanks
county
RoushCer1ified
Lane
"heshire,
Oh.
\..
Ph. 367·7560 1·1·1tc

94~ ~~~- ~~~~;::~~~~·~·~~~=======~=j~======~~~~

a mount Owed.
1'975 Me rcury Ma rquis, low
mi leage 742 2734 ·

r .APPLIANCE SERVICE I
ta!l-3561

•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

PAITS AND SIIVICl
All MAKIS

1976 CHEVY pickup truck
will sell or trade for a va n
of equal value . Also weha Ve a gaS hea ting
stove .992 7453 .
1971 FORD dump truck in
good condition . Will con·
sider lrade. $3,500. 985 4395.

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

Cal~.~~'~'~'~ung .

--

Trucks tor Sale
-1911 DODGE tour wheel
drive, 8 foot bed in goop
condit ion. $2600 .00 . Also
1974 Scout, 6 cy liJ1der, two
wheel drive. $1275 .00 . 9916323 .
72

TRI-COUNTY

"' ketp n lsAd iDrf: utur• ll: •t•rtnct

IW ol)i&gt;tU

I Dli, QU IS

1Dr u r1

eD iUI •• .,It'lerl

•R•ntu

IH C IW •I!rT•n~s

ll: ep•orinaS tnu m l
" S p•~ ,allhtn l"or"

,, Coon L'u nllro n

"' lttnlo~I Poope rlon
r· A~I. H ou••Ow n H•

,; MO!IIIf !t ome PU~ !

~======~··~"~"~;11

-

vans &amp; 4 W.O.
---1978 Jeep CJ7 Renegade.
Hard top, sun root , v·8
auto mati c. qua.dratra c,
headers. 985·3597 . $4.10p.oo.

13

1978 BLAZ E R, 22. 000 mil es,
no ru sl. 992·2178 .

5tF"IIEt_L

Fire wood for sa le. 742 2409 .

I- ll Hone Power Ridmt
Mower •
1- Good Holppinl Wnher
1- U " G E TV
1- 15 CU. fl . HOipOifll
Rf'lriger•tor

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;' ASSOC.
.

.J...,j ~
REESE ·~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Park Sl.

FAST SERVICE
1
1980 Tra nsAm Special IIIJ r-::~¥::~*~;-,
HICIIORY '"""'O CWBS
Edition
.
Power
windows,
~~~.
kto~qtu• !t e&gt;t&lt;~ Hfwo • U•t•d
a m·fm rad io, B track tape .
Law mil eage. Sell tor
PHONE .14-915·3961

Merchanise

l a ndm a rk

KAUfPS ,
,PWMBINGI
AND
HEAJING

KOKULNUTBRY

1977 Ford
s peed with overdri ve. 742·

- - - - -. -

Repo ssessed
Items

Body Repair - Insurance
work- Collision Rep,air.
Expert painting, body
work, pinslriping &amp;
vinyl tops .
Free Estimates
c 11992 3421
a
·
Kingsbury Rd ., 2 mi.
west Co . Rd. 18.
Pomeroy,Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucks.

THE

Capr i.

SJ
~ues _
ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or certified check U - - ~ Auto Part-,- - for a ntiques and collec·
&amp; Accessories
tibl es or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also, 19l 9- ;0 RRI SC ra lt ba ss
guns, pocke t watches and boat and tra iler . 16 foot , 115
coi n collect ions. Call 614- h.p. Evlnrude , tully equip·
767 3167or557·34ll .
ped . Like new . Phone 992·
3401.
An an tiqu e Singer sewing
machine and one light win· WANT E D VW camper
te r coat size 16 . Reason for chassis , a lso for sale 1970
se lling ; too large . 992·2052.
Ca maro. 992·3086 .

ow At
Pomero y _

10·7·1tC

~~~===~2~-1~3~-1~m~o=.~~==;;,~;2~-1~5=·1~m~o=.~~====~~~1-~2~l:~h~·c;.

74
~orcy_cles _ ·-1971 Sparlster XLCH .
$1.500 . 949·2293.

s4_.~Misc.

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

HARJ'S
TRASH HAULING. ·

Corn for sale at $3 .35
bushel ; also hay at $1.00
per bal e. Call667 ·3945 afler
5p.m . .

992-5682
1 r'l&gt;o. pd .

4062.5 St. Rt. 66)

64 --·- H-ay~&amp; G ra-i~~ =-~

TWO BEDROOM mobile
hom e, co mpletely fur
nished. Adul ts pre:ferred
992-2749 .

"'

31 ACRES with small house
and garage and .barn . St.
Rt . 338 near aluminum
plant . 247 ·3072 .

-=----;=·
--·
Farm Equipment
61
PICKING up a pia no in
your area . Take over
paym e nt $. Call c re dit
manager coll ect as 1·5925112 .

~OR

w aOted tORent
47
Work ing couple desires
house to rent in Pomeroy ·
Gi•[ lipo lis area, Referen
ces. 992·6090 evenings.

9'12-6191

ATTRACTIVE hom e on
two and one·half acres.
Private selling on 51 . Rt. 7
by Memory Gardens. Ter·
ms . 992· 7741.

Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroo m trailer. Adults
only . Brown 's Tr a il er
Park. 991 ·3314.
- .... -- -----·--~
THREE
BEDROOM
mobil ehome on Story Run
Road . 361· 1811 .

-Aulo and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri .
9 A.M.-5 :30P .M.

•Siding •Insulation •Roofing •Storm Win·
dows • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck- •Remodeling
• New
c:;.onstruction
•Guttering
&amp;
Downspouts

Home
t m provemen_!s
Gene' s Car pet Cleaning,
deep strea m extraction .
Free
es t i mat ed,
reasonable rates , scot ·
chquard . 992-6309 or 141·
2211 .

81

Payrolls, profit and loss state111ents, all
federal and state forms.

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

·Far all of your wir·
ing needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system .
•
Residen1ial
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195
. or 992-7680
2·8-lfc

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

All types of roof WOIK,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All wo.rk guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reas_onable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
2 ~ tfc

ALLSTEEL

J

Farm Buildings
:..ius
"From 30Kl0"

SMALL
WILL DO ALL kinds of car
pentry work , including
paneling; ceil ings, repairs,
f tc. Ex perienced, with
refere nces. Phone 992·3941.
82

·- --.:::. = -..-&amp;

Plumbing
Ht:at ing - - ·

WAT
ER and comm
WELLS
Domestic
erc ial ·.
Pump sales and service.
Tom
Lewi s
Dr illing .
Seasonal discount on pum
ps . 1 304 895 ~802 or 1·304895·3641 .

Utility Buildings

~_;:;:::;::::;~==6=·1:5:·1:fc=~

Electrical
Refrigerati,,.
on,___
SE WING
MACHINE
Re pai r s, service,
all
mak es! 992·2284 . Th e
Fab ric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales
and Servic e. We sharpe n
Scissors.

PL E TE seve r In
stallatlon &amp; back hoe ser ·
vi ce for Racine Syrac use
sewer distri ct , Dozer work
if needed . 949 2293.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweep_ers,
toasters, irons, all small
a ppliances. Lawn mower .

Sizes trom 4&gt;6 to 12•40

•

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Bo• 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-2591

Backnoe, snow plowing,
excavation, water-gas-,
sewer lines, · certifie&lt;f.'
septic systems, dump
truck, stone·coal, etc.
General home repair &amp;·
carpenttr work. Springs
·developed &amp; ponds
cleared.
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7201.
1·25-1 0~

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes· - ex tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 years
· Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583

84

_ . &amp;

992·3795
2·1·2mo.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon.·Wed. 10:00-9:00
Tues.·Fri.·Sat.
10 :P0·5:00
Closed Thursdays
Stop in and see our line
of plastercralt. You can
eniov making your gifts
and help fight Inflation
Located next tv Dale
Hill Ford Tractor in
Pomeroy .
2·23· 1 mo .

Pomeory, Oh.

Residential &amp; Ligh1
Commercial Electrical
Suoplies
Quality Products
Reasonable Prices

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

College Rd.
Syracuse,
Oh .
Ph. 992 ·3804
2-23·1 mo.
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Next to State Highway
Garage. on Route 7, 985·
3825 .
'
85
General Hauling
J&amp;C Sat'lifation Service.
Trash pl ckup .~vailable in
Village of Middleport.
Phone 992·5016 or 992 ·7597
a nytime.

�Tu_esday, February 24,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--12- The Daily sentinel

SUPPLEMENT TO THE:
Madison Press, Sentinel ,

\ Hoofs and Paws 1~!,~£!!~~! !!!~!!riter_s. ~~?.~. ~!'~~!~.~ ..
By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Hnmane Society
POMEROY - It's been a long
time since I've recommended a book
to those of you why love animals.
Today I have one to tell you about
that all of you cat owners will just
love! It is "All My Patients Are Under The Bed" by Dr. Louis J. Cam uti
... with Marilyn and Haske! Frankel.
A graduate of Cornell University
and the New York University School
of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Camuti,
practicing for over 60 years does nol
have an office but makes approximately 30 house calls per week
in of all places - New York City.
There is so much in the book that I
found interesting, funny, sad - but
the foreword at the front of the book
by Haskei Frankel is, in part, what I
would like to quote to you - and then
do try and get a copy of this book. It
is great.
He says, "! don't know if dog ·
people know other dog pe.ople, or if
parakeet people know ·o ther
parakeet people. But cat people
always seem to know other cat
people. I think we seek each other
out, and though we never really say
it to each other, we consider ourselves superior to people who don't
have or appreciate cats. I think what
makes us feel superior is not that we
have a cat in our homes, but that a
cat has found us acceptable to live
with. There's a thrill in that that a
dog owner will never know.
"Love from a dog seems such an
easy thing. Once a dog has given its
love, that Jove is constant. Tl1c dog is
ever there, ready with its licks and
leaps whenever a human being
requires them. That may impress
dog people. To a cat person. it isn't
much. It is almost cheap. it's so
easily come by.
" But love from a cat is special.
When a cat is in the mood, it may
give a lick or two with its rough
tongue or it may leap into a lap and
settle down. But none of these small
miracles occurs because some
human being has snapped his or her
fingers or whistled. To a cat, hwnan
beings are an inferior servile race,
always to be kept in' their places,
with occasional rewards if they perform well. To love a cat is uphill
work, and therefore very rewarding.''
Ain't it the truth?! I not only enjoyed reading the book but found a
· few educational things that you may
be interested in - at least I hadn't
read it anywhere before. For instance, Dr. Camuti doesn't recommend too much "anirtlal organs" be
fed to cats such as liver, kidney, etc.
He reconunends Jots of meat.
cheese, protein in other words and
says baby food is good for cats. both
meats and vegetables.
I immediately went out and
bought some for my Revie and I
want you to know she turned up her
nose and walked away from both. I
had to mix it in with her favorile
foods and sneak it into her that way.
He has no use for people who
declaw their cats or • alter any

tax writers in the House are calling
on
President · Reagan ' s chief
animal in any way and further
·economic
advisers to account for
suggests cats be raised to stay intheir
claims
that a 30 percent perside. He says there is nothing out
sonal
income
tax cut over three
there that they need - and says they
years
will
dramatically
improve the
live a lot longer if raised in the
economy. The Senate, meanwhile, is
house. Further, he states, that only
formally beginning the task of tur" ill-advised" people do nothing
ning Reagan's budget-cutting
about spaying or neutering their
proposals into reality.
pets. There are many things to be
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
learned by reading this book - and
if you are ever in NYC and see a big , Regan and Budget Director David
black car with a man who looks
A. Stockman were called before the
House Ways and Means Conunittee
son1ething like Jimmy Durante at
today as it begins consideration of
the wheel and the license plates that
merely say " CAT" - that's our vet!
·the administration's tax proposals.
Now then, any of you wanting to go
Even before Regan outlined the
on the mailing list for a cat or kitten
administration's tax plans, the committee chairman, Rep. Dan
or those of you who would like a nice
dog or puppy for a pet, please call
Rostenkowski, D-Ill., served notice
our Humane Society Kennel
that his panel would not rubbermanager - 992-&lt;l260 and ask for
. Mary Ann. She will tell you what we
have this week and make an appointment for you to come and see
them. Whether they continue to live
Emergency squad runs
out their lives depends on you.
And don't forget our Thrift Shoppe
Several calls were answered by
in Middleport, folks. We need
local emergency units on Monday,
customers and we need conthe Meigs County Emergency
tributions of things to sell. As you
Medical Services reports.
know all proceeds go for the care of
At 9:411 a.m. the Tuppers Plains
homeless animals. Those of you who
Unit took Rick Wilson, Reedsville,
have not joined who would like to or
Jean Parkins and Dorothy Barlow to
if you would like to make a donation,
Veterans Memorial Hospital from
you may write to P . 0 . Box 682,
the scene of an accident on Route 33.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Wilson, according to hospital notes,
was the only one admitted. At 1:55
a.m.; the Rutland Unit went to Meigs
Mine 2 for Wayne Kent who was
VETERANS MEMORIAL •
taken to O'Bleness Hospital in
Adrnitted--Kimberly Peck,
Athens. The Middleport Unit at 4:33
Cheshire; Raymond Larkins, Tupp.m. took Pat Cleland from Bradpers Plains ; Sarah -Lunsford, Tupbury to Veterans Memorial
pers Plains ; Gladys Chaney,
Hospital.
Pomeroy ; Ricky Wilson, Reedsville.

" The legislation we fashion will
become our product," he said, adding, " the way certain tax cuts (the
administration submitted) are
structl.l,l'edaresuretobechanged."
Although most legislators in both
houses favor some kind of tax cut
this year, many Democrats - and
some Republicans - are dubious
that Reagan's proposal will do
anythingbutfurtherfuelinflation.
On the other hand, a proposal ,for
businesses to receive faster tax
write-offs ' on . the buildings and
equipment they purchase has
received generally favorable reaction. ·
Stockman told reporters at one
point Monday that Reagan's
economic plan could send the prime
rate tumbling from about !9 percent

Meigs County happenings •..
COMING TO POMEROY
The Marietta Commandery will be
L'Oming· to Pomeroy Wednesday
evening to confer in full form the
Red Cross and the Malta Degrees.
The meeting will be held at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple at 7:30
p.m. All knights are invited to attend
and refreshments will be served
following the meeting.

E6ili&amp;sE

····-··

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ·
DISCHARGES FEB. 23
Orpha Ashworth. Mrs. David
Baker and son, Floyd Bennett. Willie
Blaine, Iva B'oston, James Dement,
Mrs. George Estep and son , Teresa
Ewing , Peggy Fyffe, Stacy
Gilliland, Pauling Harbolt, Taylor
Hawkins, Mary Hood, Leah Malone,
Mrs. Stephen McKinniss and son,
Rignal Phillips, June Rogers, Sarah
Russ, George Simpkins. Jason
Smith, Mrs. Kevin Staten and son,
Bradley thomas, Mrs. Ricky Wilson
and son, Michael Wooten.
BIRTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Downard,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Ewing, son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Merle Morris, daughter ,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Randal Riddle, son, Culloden, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. James Warner , daughter,
Syracuse.

LEASING
--EQUIPMENT

~TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.

-AND THE PROFESSIONS
614/992·2133

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Free Clothing Day will be held at
the Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday from 10
a.m . until noon. All area residents in
need of clothing are welcome .
In case of high water, free bags of
unsorted clothing will be distributed
from the Army's front porch .

SEEK DISSOLUTION
Stephen Bruce Halley, Cheshire,
and Lisa Renee Halley, Shade filed
for dissolution of ma"rl.,ge in Meigs
County Conunon P•eas Court .

Plus Tax

---.:---~~'&lt;

'\

Entertainment
Friday &amp;Saturday

Comes on many of the
finest 1981 new cars!
V' Modern P-metric sizes!

V'

siz~d 721 runs &lt;r l .\.~ lh ~ .
pressur~ tu hdp gh'l' X''i, lo 10''!,

Metric

belh:r gas mikilgi.· Ihan our
nun-radials at steady hl).!hway s p~~ds. .
Wllln:WAI.I.

,\l.~u fH~
I ~I tin· :!nd t in· F.t: ·!'·
Size
1
f--- - - - l - - - - " - 1 - - .
J)\' r m:
Rl&lt;/
,
-14
1'17;i /7 :iRH
2.04
81.00 40.10
I'INS/iSil14 ClliN -14
PI 11S/7o H14 Dll .Ul/H -14 87.00 43.10 2.26
2.37
91.00 4S.IO
1'20S/7Sill4 FIOH-14
l.S2
93 .00 46.10
P21.i /7 S ll14 GHiK -14
98.00 49.00
P22S i7 S lll4 llll7 K· I4
P20.\/7Sil1S FlliH- IS 92.00 46.00
96.00 48 .00
1'21S/ iSK 1.\ GIOK -I;i
1'22S/iSR l.i IIR .jl! iK . i,\ 99 .00 49.10
P2.1S/ iSH lfi Llli K· l.i 106.00 13.00

ALL LEGAL

BEVERAGES
SERVED

PRICE

THE MEIGS INN

SMALL CAR
Also fit~

60&lt;1 E. MAIN

THR££

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Arthur Eugene Bradshaw, 23, Middleport, and Patsy Ann Yeauger, 2~
Rt. I, Long Bottom; Paul David McBane, 27, Middleport, and Peggy
Lynn White, 18, Middleport.

Phone 992·3629

AR7H -1.1
ll&gt; :iHIJ
IIR 7H -1.\
CH i H-I.l

Pomeroy, Oh.

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent.or l,egal guardtan.

old li rt: . "4·rih tread.

HOME

PH. 992-2094

Front End AlignmentSll.SO Most Passenger Cars. Brake Service

,.

POMEROY, OH.

F£8RUARY

--BANK ONE .._

Emergency units of Meigs County
were kept on the move in answering
nwnerous calls on the weekend, ac-cording to the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services.
On Saturday at 7:30 p.m., the
Racine . Unit took Paul Craig,
Bashan, to Veterans Memorial
REVIVAL SLA'I')!:D
Hospital.
The
Rev.
Roy Deeter will be
On Sunday at 9:49 a.m., the
speaker
for
a
revival to be held at
Pomeroy Uniftook Pauline Derenthe
Long
Bottom
United Methodist
berger from Mechanic St. to
Church
beginning
Sunday,
March 1,
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
and
conti~uing
through
Sunday,
Brews tO c ups Of
8:19a.m. took Darrell Swartz, Route
March
8.
Services
will
be
held
at
7:30
de
ltc
ro
us
co ffee m abou t
. 143, toO'Bieness Hospital in Athens . '
10
lll lll U h :l S - 2 CLIP$ Ill
each
evening
and
the
Rev.
Richard
Pomeroy at I: 02 a.m. took Tim
d bOu l 2 mrnutes
Adams and Robert Bissell from Five Thomas, pastor, extends an inD1sposdble p;tper frlter
vitation
to
the
public.
Points to Veterans Memorial
keeps the bt ller
Hospital and the Rutland Unit at
tas te ou l
7:02 a.m. took Lauren Hoffman,
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Salem Center, to Veterans
The Long Bottom Corrununity
·Memorial.
HOUSEWARES
Association will hold its February
The Mtddleport Unit at 12:18 p.m.
meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the
took John Dill from the fire station to
DEPT.
conununity building.
Veterans Memorial and at 1:13 p.m.
treated Mabel Winebrenner at her
1st FLOOR
residence. Racine at 9:36 p.m. took
LODGE MEETING
Carl Shultz from Elm St., to
A special meeting of Middleport
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pomeroy Lodge 36:!, F&amp;AM, will be held at
at 3:27p.m. took Ruth Mulford from 7:30 p.m. this evening with work in
Pomeroy Cliff Apartments to the entered apprentice degree.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,---__:~--:::--~=------L·~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!!"'-!!!!!!~

FIRESTONE'S r
FINEST
STEEL BELTED
RADIAL

iu_ld

PT. PI.WANT
N£W WIINGTON
G£0RG£TOUJN
IIJEST UNION

I

Mashed Potatoes and Gravy,
Soft Drink, Coffee or Tea,
. Dessert

Allpriq: s plus lax

WOJ.STON
McARTHUR
WAUOLY
LONDON
POlURt\1

~-• 13" PIZZA •

------FRIDAY SPECIALSalad Bar, Liver &amp; Onions; Vegetable,

'PI I&gt;S I Hlllll.\
I' 17Sii.tl lll.l
I' I io/ Killll.l
I'IKS / KIIRI.l

JACKSON

HOSPITAL :\E'\'\S

Discharged--Timothy Adams.
Mahala Rue , Leona Babcock.
Charles Page.

Messenger.

II IUSY STOR£5:

Congress completes action.
panel's ranking nunonty member,
When pressed later, Stockman ad· Sen. Ernest Hollings, !).S.C., would
mitted he had gone too far. "! introduce a measure m the Senate
thought about that and I think I today calling for the cuts Reagan
misspoke a little," he told The wants .
AssOciated
Press
through.------------spokesman Ed Dale. "We do anticipate a substantial decline in interes! rates, but I can't say that they
will be down to 8.5 percent at any
earlytime." ,
•
Your choico tf any . ,
In the Senate, meanwhile,
•
,.,.••. •••. $4.0.
Republican and Democratic budget
leaders have agreed on a fast-track
$2.56 ,..,. Ooly. •
method of considering Reagan's
STARTS MONDAY
proj,osed budget cuts.
Reagan has asked Congress to cut
$125.9 billion from the budget over
the next three years, including $4.8
billion this year, $41.4 billion ip 1982
•
AU lOCATIONS
•
and$79.7 billion in !983.
·
Senate officials said Sen. Pete
Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN

air

Shopper's R..lew, Pt. Pleasant •
Register, Dally Sentinel &amp; Peeble's

• THURSDAY, FRIDAY Be SATURDAY

I

e FEBRUARY 26, 27 &amp; 28th
•

"YOU ALWAYS DO
BETTER AT STIFFLER'S

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45267">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45266">
              <text>February 24, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
